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Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-10-02

Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-10-02 page 1

tebMs of subsckiptioh ' 0II.t-Ote 8.Ur, eob lntkHl..................O 7 ' .,, Special noiiGM uor bquuo. Moh inwr- , i. 1,1 ' i," Local and ItiMiMu Noting. nr Una. Slnfflanbseribers.1 vear. bv msdl. SlnatoSnhachbera. 6 months..'. ,..,-. 4 60 ' ' each insertion . 0 SW STugm Subscriber., S months," ft a: lb-wIum 1 month. " S SS 0 80 i -WaBkLIUn Square, .sohiiisertion... ...... 1 M Single Subscribers, T msnth, dc)rnred..A. 0 90 SI ogle 8nbscritMrs,1Mr week, delivawsl.,, .' 0 To Agents.in clubs, 16 cents per week each oopy. :. i TIBJSS Or VBC -M-WSXX3.V 10PBSAL. I year 14 60 I months.-.,,, 12 S . f .. " Local and Business Notices, per Hue, m.-M-.., Mrh lowrtion v..:...:....... 0 30 ..(:. '; atrOn Square covers three-iuarters an inch "t .paw in toe ooiuruus oi vn. joum.. , . Mrr!ns N tlce -50cts., when under t've linns. S monta... 1 U 1 1 saonth. .0 COLUUS,; MORNING, OCTOBER 2, 1866. 5 , Book and Job Muting UKttly promptly feti. NUMBER..6S. iUrnl or TH vmtl WSMUr Single SnbamiberB, par jtrr. TERMS OF A1VEUT1M1XU. ..,J 'O 1 if V'i V f A MORNING JOURNAL 4 (tier N. Et t-ite tttrret. A ft. HO TO TOWK8U1B COM- ... V desire to call your attention to tue oesi(y of inorcssed vigilance' upon, .he' pari of yourself and working Union men throughout tho Slate. It is now well known .i that the Copperheads are reviving, so far as poes-ble, the old Knights of the Golden .h"rV ano -eaiing that will- not answer thoir purpoHes, by false am spurious pre- -1'iiBses they aw endeavoring to oatoh the yonog and unwary, and especially the sol- . (iters. .1 be machinations of these secret orders hhauld be frustrated. Watph,tiiem oama their rjiaus, undi eipoee theni when possible, Their very existence is dangerous to Jiberty and Republican institutions, and mould bo uu'.ver8uy denounced. We are confident, that with a fair and honest elecl ( ' tion and full vole, the day is ,.ours. Buj, .,we nTe reason to believe that gifeantio enemes of fraud are being organised by me Copperheads by importing potest falsi. fication of poll boq and stuffing of baj lot Does. In view of this, allow us to ex ' h rt you - ' ' - ' . j .. , 1st. Let every ballot box be examined en the morning of ihe. election before a frolftis I s , , ' - 124. Let an efficient challenging oammit-te be appointed to' stand at the polk from 6 o'clock A. M. 1 until. closed, to challenge ry man (iffer'ing to cast a ballot, not known to be a legal voler, and when, challenged, to insist that lie befut to answer un-' ' &ri''batK as to nis qualification, ncnording to ' the Statute ' j -',-,,! ' 3d. When Ihe polls are closed, Ao not ' permit' the ballot box to be taken Away before counting, anless oue trustworthy jUaion man be always present with it.' " j ... i. .After, opening the box, let a tompe tisut oomm'ittee of reliable Union men r-' nihin with the Judges until' alt suobj voles " lounled and the poll books eertiied te See that I here is no changing of Tote's, that ' f hey are correctly rrad and recorded, And 'lae reeult Is correctly stated and certified in the poll books. Coder Ihe Statute' of 1 Ohio, eaoh candidate f or ' a State, District, or Couuly office, has a right to have tw6 of his friends present during the euliit time of eouuiing the voles and certifying jhepoll boohs Under this Statute let Union men Mildly demand their rights. j 5th. Exhort all your Union voter to be ' t the polls early, and if possible remain "during the day. ! ,, " 6ih. Make ample arrangements 'to get the sick, the infirm, the aged and this help- ;' lea to the polls. : I ' ' 't'h At 2 o'clock P. M. of election day, make a Hat of all the Union men who are absent, and at once send outandull to the polls ll absentees, j j ,j i -- f . t 7 . . 8th, Get each of your . School litlriot Cminnte-.mn to see each Union voter in k a District on the day before the eljeotion, '' ' and to furnish eitcb with two tickets, re- questing him to vote one, and , get his n ighhor to vote the other. ,i J i I i Finally, let every honorable 4iethg and ' '" " fffort t resorted to in order to secure every " ' vote'for the Union lioket possible, land to .. prevent the ewine from being overwhelmed i t by a fraudulent and maoutaoiured vjote. RlnlOKl. j The, New York journals speak of Ristori, . sinco her brsi appearance in the sanie high praise as be 'ore Comparing, or rather contrasting her with Rachkl, the Tribune saye: ' 'Ouce fairly seen, we wonder thataoom-pariscju. should evejtave been suggested between Ristori and RaoheL There is no 1 likeness between tbea. Kiutori is a Roman; Rachel was a pure Greek. R'stort is "Niobs," 'Clytie," ";he Ariadne;'' feaobel i was a virgin of tho Panathenaio fc'rieie. . RsloJ-i is a graud, large-hearted, passion-ale, beautiful beiii)i; Rachel was intellectual and o i'd, with passions slowly roused but creeping with intense earnest to their aim. ' ' ,., t: , Tb pure, still beauty of the Jewess, her lithe gra:e. her ur.consoious attitudes that filled the memory with statues, her voice that rang all the changes of passion, hatred corn, fury, contempt, despair, but eo sel- , dom trembled to Ihe breath of love; her eye, that froz -, or lascinated, or mtde the heart grow small with tear, that uould burn like a, tender coal with hate, but never melted to a burning ray; her frame, so frail, so shadow-like, that, would have moved our ' pt'y if the soul that lived and burned in i every fibre of it had not seemed so mighty to hold its tbroDf ; wh-kt bad thi woman' in common with Ristori?, and yet Ristori's greatness is now touched by (he unlikeness. ' Them is oue glory of the sun od anoth-er,f lory of the moon, ami we are glad that t these two. women of genius ate so ditterenl that while we are in the presence ; of the one w uro not forced to contrast! nor to cooi'i'are her with the other. Aiid if orig-, inainiy. lie a proof of genius, tben it is not poaaibl'? ' deny that Ristori has keoiue, Stfl recalls no artist that living eyes have behe'd. Least of ail is she to be compared 1 with R-tehel -so long misnamed her rival. She can do muoh that Rchel never did, much that Rachel never would have at teuipiud; and, for our own part, we frankly confess that when the tumult of emotion ' ' in which we le't the theater bad, in a ineas re, passed away, there had passed with it a mis' or prejudices and msoonoeptl ns that had veiled this woman from our fair judgment) bu', thanks to her genius, it pass- d, and henoeforth her majeBtic figure etan'ls in the memory, a separate splendor, an individual glory. aPHEMi'DNI IAI Of HeH- R ANU FRt.K, SPEECH.; .... Th Hwapltalitleia of Jlenipbla. ' From hi Hrinphia Avalatcbo. We undereland that a move is on;fnot in this city in invite Henry Ward Beecher to visit Memphis, lo enlighten our people as to their duly in the existing political crisis. If Mr. B ecber Gomes hereof his own accord, or if at. ihe invitation of the Radioal party, to address them, we have no objeo . tion, uud he will have accorded lo him that respectful hearing wb:ch a deoently be-h tved public speaker will always meet in Memphis. But weproleBt against the hu- milistine abjection into which Memphis will sink whenever this Puritan peddler of religion and polittos is digmned with a so lioitatioit from our people to come here and , tell hem what to dj He has been our life ldua bitter, implacable, relentless enemj ' and wo dishonor ourselves whenever we a tire to bis favor or decorate- him with umnlim:nt irr nntioe. " L t us not be deceived by Ihe small demonstration he has recently made in our liehlf His craven sml h -B already caused him to qunk? before the indignant frSwn of his Radical proselytes, and he is now ai ever our enuuy. Let these gentlemen, who-an Himrised to do honor lo Ibis Sharp's ' RifleJBeecher make a pilgrimage to Fly moulh Cliurot), ttrooaiyo, u arur uim. u . were better thatmhey should go there at the expense of tlveir own pocket., than that he should eome here at the expense of the dig-. nily and honor of the true people of Memphis If he comeB, let Anna Dickinson and Beast Battler be included in the invitntion.. For the comfort of those careful ladies who have -excellent t otd-fsshioned silks packed away in their wadrot-es, let us add hat Bayadere si ripen horizontal stripes. 1 will be highly popular, and the raiment, which has beeu disretpeotfully spoken of as the "duds" shall, renew its youth as the eagle. " v'' '' -UO.'lil' :!f., " i.isl'lu 'is . ,rli,bu!', 'fGkNltskiiii'6V 'r'nis'toittroS IMay ask yoar indftlgencef one'mst sected 'de tention, that I may be able to make bvysolf heard. ' we are- met here upon the ifncst momentous issues ' eter- pTeetei foiecny.' body. ofi men,, and. Ao-Uo inch iod of nrn waa.ifver,. before a;jrrnBntaiettioii presented for adoption., . You "are lesUei --i...i'i! .'.V-A-.lu J'it,.i-a.il-ii. and thOet rights ailif that oottrs of govern-ment for whiohiou fotulrlt .Hb.Jthi field. Applause. iVKe ja'8H(ih ' welll Vp? wnen the laat jebel surrenuerea ana wnen W arnts ver lotpf ion warjwhere; that ceace and nnitv and concord snouid nrevau. But, unfortunately ' for the' bounti-yi iBome evil tlrongnfcwtered, inth'thei'heart !of Hiie. rJxecutitre et itha H aUotu a oesumi ng lominf aelf BtengtJUf,mind aMoiuxpose to deal with a flueattp yrbush he ehouw naTe. pron oenled lo the whale ffovernmeUt ' Of ' the United States' innCon'gVeSB;8mblediidie: uidsrtoaiBj bf hii iotm- til,, to Tectoistrtirjei the oouairyj. It was0iacL the power todoi which, no President had ever before oliJi ed. , The, question et admiUiRg State iMo the Union had more than once be TW sented to this Government. K.nsa8, we all remember:'.'' Mlesoltrt 'Taeeef beyond, Ub nenory m pmivji Vfofi fa ouv if listory telle, us ,UiaL,.Uie ,opunpry, divided unon the Question upon what "terms Mi sour! should be ftdmitted.' Did the then Bxo-t eCull vej able1 and eonstilirtional la wy er.U) at,i- be vras.-Miaj ih then jjixeotutM- oMim, Joy his fiat, by its policy he . could, say thow a State was to oome into the Union Ylffvit was refbrred; to the Coltftfress of the" United States. But passing' on, tne present jexeaii- 'lve gavejwhatf hevoaJted, an.oxpentnental government, toeach of the Slates, for j which Inave earehedin-.TsliLto j64ny eonsfi-tutional authority. .What won the States thai had revolted trout Ihe Union? iFqr in. ttai que&i6n.a to-,'wni6h'"I ' purpose jto call jour alien tion: for few-meaiente, ill seems to me the whole issue is here and.no r to bo determined. Yea remember that beoause Abraham Linobln was eleoted eleven! States with the sympslbV"ef 1 Some "two' oi1 three more icrelud from"th IUninr seised all the ncoperty,a,ndldroye out .every jreatige of union authority and Union powers; armed themselves against the ' constituted mh or-ity of the country; confederated themselves into a tinfnn arid government, raised Wrtntali' and attempted to inaugurate :and set afloat a navy, and put1 themsePret in such position that the Supreme Geurt of.the United States deeided. that aUitlje .people on this territory were , national enemiee, 'eiiwged In a olvil and territorial war. rferejatihis noint. felloW-Wldier. we should: tron la Mnr aider What' wa theie oC(lition.au they were not at thatfjime out of the ynv, cer tain it, is that .the. Union, was bur of hem. Laughter. j;; Standing' 'juitl tlftre my ' Comrade sailors, when' . we1 Ipassed Tort i Jackson, bade , tfce idesid.! it the immortal , Fanagut , did ,..,WB believe that Louisiana hdd all her rights in theUnidh at that time ? , You, who landed at Port Royal, ' afieV that most brilliant bombardment, fellow soldiers, did you? believe that South CarelinA iwaa then ia.theUnioh, with all her rights and privileges as a part oi the growing power ot this Union I Vlcariy not. Toen let ns follow otf for a few -moi ments, beoauae if there is any' man eo stupid here., as to ,Jbelieve, thV ak,tha!t.,lime South Carolipahad all her, rights) in the Union aS a" part1 of the governed, him have I offended, and he had better take hie hit and go Co dinner, for 1 shall not addr!3 . nim nyt longer, LApjiuse,.,! - jnjw then, with varied success, at, Gettysburg, Wntie-lam and a thousand other baUI'78, of which' you are the repreeenl'itives," tb"war was- fought out. w-0 -trgree that at the) time I have' spoken, 'the beginning "Of the war, these :men. had. no rights ;ia;h: Union. Then the,war was fp.uj(hlr quU IVjiat was" the next step in the progress of tie nation? Alt' the armed soldiers representing! hese meb surrendered itbemselves prisOuers of warl Mark that,,; Surrendered .themselves surrendered themselves,- aud.tbop-i'ights, and everything they had to our' vicjtorious arms. TApplauee.1 Is (here any 'man here who will eliira 'that by Surrender men get rights? i.r Applause la theraBy man here who will claim ; (hat a mau conquers by saying "I give up?" Applause. Then they got no rights.1 What di they beiiome What did ttfey claim they were ? What did they claim amnesty as? As paroled prt3- onars of wan. s ftow 4hor -my ddubttrk friends, if any there are here, ,i(S nqt a pa roled prisoner of war .pretty poor material to make sovereign States of this Uh on out of? Great Apprause.JI'-1 ''it-o t What were the mates then in inteldmont of public law? What were-, the .Stites in intendment of National right and, of; evsfry decision of every court hud1 every Jurist? They were bdl oamp of paroled prieoneirsy under Ihe guard of our soldiers, see thai nobody mojefsted thfcm so, long as they behaved well. .Now, then, I ask yptl right here, can theW'be ' any ' doubt iti ' the' lan guage Of your resolutions, 'that the "Congress of the United -States, :.Teprsenting the G(y-erament; pf lie (Conquering army jof the Uattea plates, nave luit rights to make all necessary rolts and regulations for the gov ernment of ten cimps of parrlod'prisojer of war? ) I4 not diseusstheaustidn what you call thom. , 1 deal with the qjiest'ion ui .'.,i e.,1. t.nI-i it...'1 may oall ihem. territorier,i--oonqueTed pvtM- vinees. anything but oar governors U. wqH Stand that.' Applause But I have heard lav BUPUiDnj, wuiun is tnw eira auu tviui, lu Alpha and Umetaor H argument against rt, to this effect, "AVsil.Jl dou't, undirStaMi you there, you jay that a Stale has no rignt to secede, you say that the States tried to. seoede, ana you wutppea mem ana prevent ed them; then you say ! that they v not 'id Union; how do you reooaoue. that I j Let us for a moment , deal,, with that ..argument. What do we .say precisely ? we ay that no act of si Btate, Or the Governmentj of the United States even, can alter the gela tions of a. single ouizen or, this govern ment to useir. without his coasenivi we say that, ho State can take al single foot'' "of " American ' .oil -' from I under the authority of the Amerioan -government or the protection of the .American flatr. We nav the oblicrations of every man remain the same to the U hilled' 8tates."Tle distinction we make' if "hiB they' lof t, their rightt by the crimes they oommitlet , while thev did not get rid of their obligation! Thev had rishta as a part of thin Gevern- -F-- : :... . .. . , . ment, as estates in tnis union; mey Baa oo-ligatiohs as citizens of the United j Sta'.ep. Let me give you an eiampie laminar to our courts.., A man commits murder,,. At that moment he has all the high rights jof a citi- zeo, the right to the ballot, ' the right to be elected to office, the right lo the marriage relation, the right to the government of his children, the right to walk a freemavi jarowad the streets;- bat bf the Act of aittrier, hj that orims he forfeits this right, t?ihis' liberty, to his wife, to his children, and even to life itself. Mark me 1 He gets rid of none of his" ODitganons la society loy nis own rime:i' f Applause. 1A go with these States. While they uld,not make,,anerhair white or black, far as their diebcyranc from ihe Union "was 'concerned,' yat .they, by their -treason and their crimes) oiild forfeit all their rights in the Union, ...Jtot' lei's I traitors beoause., thfy,, were, joiiize1ns-;' pot less citiBCUB ueuaus? invy imo uaiiuio Applause Now then, what" is State ? for it is said' that V 4Jtt can never diov Suppose;' for momewt, ,, tht Rail,, th people t in a ( 8t,atet die, what becomes of ,the Jl.tate then? Laughter.. Srippdce - Jail me people move out or a -otie, (I noW ipak of 'the polilioal urganraa-tion at a part of this Government) What, becomes ot, tee at ate then f t)uppose one step farther, that all the people of a State snbstanriiiily, with a Tew jtioriortS exeep lions, whom we need not now stop to con- sider--eppose they U,repudiaio the.ir ob ligations to this Government and all bound themselves together and ' swore allegiance lo another Go-vernnienti,ritud all? united -in arms to drive outi the utluinuef of this. Goininen-rwlMt. &en- sbeoewies ' of-;tbe Stij'e.? . W.liy.jth.8tmte is destroyed, because the Stale is but the or'fean"of civil go'vern- men. "I ;do not'Htibw, tayfriends,; that It will ntakv the -argument, any istrsagsr T','t At the ai :v : rr, aui oi -rut. : I quote,.Jtn authority to. you, especially such an. guthoi-ity, but Andrew Johnson, in bis proclamation appointing provisional Governors, says that he appoints provisional Gov rnors nooao 611 -otvu goyernment (Sd--BjirojyM 4a, the. revolted States., f'WUh ell t vil government destroyed " using his very tanguaga, -"wnerewas the Btatef ' 'jyhe're- fore u the idea that a State can hevr die, that a State must always exist, and hat a SlleJby ,iLs people can fight , the Union fur tour years aua then come buck or its own lalitiWAnd undertake to govern the fllnjon is ,a,j9ophism. and a delusion unworthy ot in. intelligent' people., Applause. j Now, fhian, u.is.sal, farther, that a btate cannot di0 and panno)t,loee iifi rights, becauaia that ltjuos n.figintQeeceuo.. jusi us ioo ajiw a ui tie tartner. .1 sua a man jiere tu. ioe - i" : if 't. i - 1.1 - J 1:- li . rUSwafK. weuexiug in uis uiuuu, (iio iari eutr&nd he. bloody razor, iu his handjshow-r jDgjasa. pf ,8uioido,'.,".Why,',',',I say ,"(he oan i,-aeoa, ;, . ysso, sy ypili . ne cannpt be dead, he had no right to, put big ttirnaU" it is a nutation of right, not a 'quosfioa jjl faot... To, that,I answer, this is a quostion of nfRafMftl jrlM nJderstn4 to be Ui tcujiringiplaa of, the gr'ea): Republican pull'ou this question, that iu tliia great oontt-at uat :one xiiTlit of the Gov'rhment Am Ujise. States or , over, .t'e ..ottliiei s was )st,4iut eyer'y rjght of every trai'tor on, its so U. forfaited and gone fprevc Applause. itJi w have settled then.io o,ur satiafiquoii, upon U) a principles of . luexpraoie logif ua truth, what is the condition, of these Peo ple, we have settled definitely what shall be the ' rights of : Congress or the rest Pf the nation-.":Tlteil? tights' are1 -all potferfuL Theft -duty isi another . question, i Nfiw, iu D-goyeriittitntal notions against.conimuiiU .ties. t hasjalways been found neccssajry for fWlibvernment to treat obmmnnttita s, if, they had erred or bon miBled,Ho be jin the moss forgivea." hat all . go vorumonts have always treated as samples . those: that misled their nnmmiiTiUfeR Jand tftat ia Irir ''duty, it ' would1' seem to rie, ; in tho-present crisis, Applause to ex- tand i Ap ; the . South, -:to - -the - Southern men who as communities have been misled, our cordial welcome back when thew will Oitne bsek in the sriirit of truth, Of justice, of right, bf kindness and of loyalty in; which wq otter t receive them. . liuu tor tqe men that misledjthem, the great representative men, let them be so dealt with that no man hereafter shall ever leave his seat 'jn the Congress of the United States, or desert the glorious flag for the purpose of taking com mand in' the armies of our enemies. Applause 1 As 1 have said, governments must deal with communities if they have erred. as soo ir as the communities nave , shown a desire to be received i. back, in an humble,, (piarkthe word,) in an humble thafikfal-n'tts for the olemency meted out tat them. beoause it is for men who have' erred to be humble when they: acknowledge their mistake. As for, .the real, I would answer here the. question put,by the President, 'Would you bang eight millions? No, no, Mr. Prosidenl; God forbid! but you begin and hung- one, and we will tell you when to stop! tl.remend.ous applause . Now,, Mr.f JJavis is, perhapsby no means the worst man in the "Southern Confederacy," but h chose to hae lh9 place' of a representative man Mhe "played for-an empire, and stakjed, his iJ'u.on the result, and,.)et him. pay the for- leir, applause, as an example tor all .time that no man shall plot treason - in -the halls Of ' the "Congress of the United States: ApphtnBe What shall wje say, (allow soldiers, of another man who, educated in. tie. mtjiiry, academy, of tho United Stales, to b a equal to which we Jiad to serve four years in the field, mid blood and doatb; privation and imprisonment, brought up at tbt feet of Gamaliel, Ihe chesein, petted chief of staff iQ the Lieutenant General of the United States, on the 19th of (April, 1801, when our neighbors and comrades were being Boot down- iu Baltimore, resign ed his commission and . went back I to his uaiiviwtatf? JFr.what purpose? ior the purpose ot,. on the morning of the i2'21 of April followrag, reoeiving a commission as eomniauder o all the rebel foroes ih Virginia.,, Is Uierd any mau here so stupid as net to know thatColpnel Leo, of the United States cavalry, whcn be resigned his.conn mission on the' 19th of April, believed and knW-that he was to be appointed fa the 'i'iA, Commander-in-Chief of, ithei rebel army of Virginia? lie, did know it.j Now then, fellow soldiers, what shall bS 'done with the soldier who' deserts his flag, and takOS' with him the secrets of hiscommaud-r, i(cies of ."bang him,, shooting, lis too good for him,") who deserts for the purpose of taking command, or bribed by a higher command in tho armies of the eneiiies of 'Iris country? - Wy, vre .-all-know tlat by every, law, human and, I hope without ir-rcyerence, I may, say, diviue, any soldier who deserts bis nag for the purpose' of aking command it the army of Ihe enemy, shad snrely suffer death. Applause. ' But, say 'you. General Lee but followed fhe,'eeces8iotf of his 'Stale.' Alas ! .'my friends -history shows that there wns not left to him that poor excuse for rebellion! Fori on- the l"tb of April, his State ipassed the ordinance o , secession, but they; put in that ordinance a clause that it snouid be told and of none effect until it was ratified by the -people at a vote to be taken ion the 23d. of -the following May more than a month afterwards . So that General Lee left the army of the United states, aqd went into Virginia, and" was at the headjof the rebel fauces in Virginia beforet hi State seceded aarried her out at, iho pciut.pf UB pay unci, .iiiiw, geuiiemeu, we a(i an Arbold, aud he escaped punishnienf; but he did not remain here:' We have haB, as; it seems to me, sn equally gmlty traitpr, and the question, to. be decided,. in this qountry. is, whether his surrender as a prisoner of war' when he was cant urea.' Bhall avail him sgainsl th( 'desertion of his 'flag to lake sertvioe in the rmy rf the enemies, of hie pouttlryy vttties of "No! ncl" , t I. therefore, again siv that 1 would make example of this man, so that no jsoldier hereafter should evter find it convenient to desert the. flag of his country.. 'Good!-' ChW.T'AM'-T0T!i4B-''8t, the most hu initiating-speolaoleihat took placet at the olose of this war was tha, here were thesfO rebels threatening that if we did 'not do 'pre1y much as they wished, they would go to Mexioo, or Brazil, or aoum America, or somewhere they would go aud leave us WhAt ought we to have said to them? "Go! 'Stand not on the order of your going, but go at once. More ibau that:, lucre is a free ticket on board a United Stales tran-s porit toH take you wherever you life, aud the farthot tne' belter; but see to it that you never come' babk." ' And is there one ean bore to doubt that; if that course bad been, taken, there would ba to-day: peace, qui?t and amity with the South? Nobody doubts it. A golden opportunity was lcBt, but not lost forever. We have, offered to the Slates in rebellion that if they will ao cept the Constitutional Amendment they shall return to their share in Ihe Govern ment. But, fellow-soldiers, I want to add another condition to that. "Good, good." There may be many that the. country may need to add; but It as a soldier, desir,e to i , i : . : ,i 1. .. it ... 1 ft (Id one uuuuiuvu, hjiu you bhuii juuu uiq whether I wish to be very harsh.' : In the States Cemetery of Texas did lay reposing ihe bones of. our comrades who fell viatims to (he oliniate-and to the war in that State, They -were-t Sleeping : sido iby: side with the Confederate , dead. There,,, all animosity should have beeu forgotten. But the State Legisla'ureof Texas have passed a resolu tion that our comrades' -bones must be re moved to-'some other place, lest they con taminate the Confederate dead. J Hisses Again, at liolleywood sleep our comrades who died at Bella. Isle and, Libby; and when, on a time of festival, all Virginia turned out to deck the graves of the Con federate dead, a few Northern ladies whom they ' term: Northern school-marms, and few, women of darker hue, but. of true patriotism, went to deck the graves of our 0 mraaes wun men- iuyi lo&eas oi respect. these flowers ana tnese wreathes were IpfnUoWn and trampled in The dust , Again ihe 1 United States took money from the irotwiry , of, the North, sustained by our taxation, and bought a piece of land near Malvern HilTand tho brave and glorious dea-J who repose iti their last reining place on dbat bMl field!. t where we may say, wWiuut . doing,, wrong to anybody, if .tW victory baa ' been followed np, 'the 'war would have' been ended' Ihe United States, I ' say, bought a cemetery to: and gathered, the fragments of our dead he ''-' lo Si:. -I1.il rbos,' and' buried them- there-with due re, speot and Christian kindness, and ovej- their remains they raised this ur flag pointing to the' American"-standard 1, as the most fit- I'dut monument to a soldier of - the Union. Cheer. And yet the reconstructed rebels of -Virginia tore down that flag and tram-pied it in': the dustr Cries of "shame." There was a time in this war when a nan who tore down the -American flag met his- -deserts-tgreat sheering for "the only'man .ihat dared , to. bang a.ritor" and that' time will,,come .again,, Now, thaconditien I would impose, and vou.sfiatj judgejfcheth: er or not it ha a hard oue--is uus;. hat we s nan t nave tuose those. States, brought baok into the -. U man . until our until our dead 'corn'radii- chn 'l SleoD in neace and honor wiltin their bOr- dersVohcorsl:.ad if any man wants recon struction before that .happens,! ant net with MUI. LUC ,UJie,,' uuuu ..UJtWftC 1 r I a uim"' o the Com,mite baye.,aid .in. tlir resolu-.:..i . , ' : i ' it. i UOLUi 14111 lb .WttB ,UUlUj:tUllUM3 UIt(- VU1 F v poa'itiona.jjy (Congress vrej not.ieoeiVed in the some fraternal, pirit with whloh they were, offered,, and ,unlil.that time ooipes, be it sooner or latierj-TT-untu. every, man-can walk .in- peaae carrying the flag Of the United .States,.if, hepleasfs-jjith; evo tion to the Union on his lips, and bpt-jpa molested, In every Toyolled Stale, far one, I di' not -wont ntonsMiiUMt State in the Union makinit isiwaforme. fGfeatohgeW mm I i u.-.., nun tdor limn nnmnn I na ter; but never until the two oome ion ether. Cheers, , My friendeyVBaTtat we have., unkind .feelings , towards, thoep men, that; we arb governed, ,y..,maliqe,,',fWhy 1 was alvPhikde)pnia, and n6,tj tbe truej Union men of.tfie South. tUere; and Uia 'malipe hat we showed.,them'".w.ft81,tn take ISjitn to qnr hearts, to aur arms, and wilh very good feel ing to embrace then), as the true brothers of theNoBtlu : TJiat was '.t,jwj,w mat-ike Smi,Lhern .ioyaiBta who. Bad ev?r slood by ka.. For. one. 1 can. point back' when we had achieved the. greatest, victory, we -ever diot achieve-rrwhea we eleoted Preaident) Jen- son laughter, as the General .corrected himself - President Lincoln.' (I beg tar don of the Conyention.for the mishap. t nVhen we bad elected President inooln, wlitn' nis pernjujsion'aud with his knpwldge l stated in New. York, at a public meeting, that the only thing ,w.e' asked them to dd was to lay. dowa (heir arma and oome, oaok and resume thail nioA.a anil if ihav witnlit Anl tf would receive ,tiem. Butr they chose -to fight months and months after as long:s they could and then we asked them (o come, back, and w,bat is, the answer?. The answer at New Orleans in the murder, of I Dos tie and Horipu; this answer, is at Mem hi ln the .riots there; liar answer is heard t lloyer the country, for but yesterday,' all aost a Union officer fox doing his duty wt s kidnapped when about his lawful, business, and taken to . be tried .for obeyibg the order ,,. of. hia . comminder , by .a! rebel jury. .. Now... Kentiemen, ,1, say until m the same fraternal feelings with which we I, u I, oalra.1 lliam a MnmA Kab n w. A 'ATiilnj H not thjr.righis but what the clemency and puignanimiijr of..tle1 North, shall. ..givis them until tMyjeqeiTa Northern' nxn KorlA-? ern eqldiers, ,nto iieiiammunitieb with equal, rights, and equal privileges! nay more, until, every man. black or white, .who has ever worn the blue, b as, good, 4s "J1-body else . in, (he .South UD.til,lrtliat time comes,, ! say, tdo not'de8irej 'to.,'see( ihem yaca. , .ureat ooeenng.j , now is iaib question,. .then, to, be settled? ,JL hava some knowledge, of, the South, and. of Southern muj, (.lave already said to you' that had the President and. Congress agreed of what terms they would offer, at the moment after the surrender ' of Johnston's armyj those term would" have bo acoeded lo. But by the encouragement of the PresidenUby his most singula'r- and tfbt to be extilained oarsei and by the action-oof those at the North who have encouraged them, the South have come into a very different fiamt-io mind. But fellow Soldiers, let thdWsesi that the President does not rule this coun try without bheid of Congress. . .Applause ' Ihat s it. I -Let them understand that yeu take no step backward, applause, and tnat as sure as litthtl . follows, the darkness of the night, so sure we propoaei to (main tain the ioyeroment of this country, for which we hava foughl; and they , will ac- oept any terms we will offer, and- wje will offer uoue bat what are . just n4js9jgaasi. mous. I Uheors loud and Ions continued.! JKSN Y MN'8 XOSS jF.,Vll)E. " All our readers wfllTegret to learn that the' greal singer' who exoiled stich jentbus siasni in. this cOiuntry nearly, twenty years gn, anu wno was lovenr.ayaiosi., as mncn for her generosity of heftrtf ' for her mar- elous voice, no ' longer retains her power. letter in the uourier.des ttats Unjis tells the sad story : u. ..-i-'-.-?.:r -i-. i j How shall we describe the 'impression we received on hearing1 Jenny1 Lindj at St. James's Hall last week in M. Arthu Sullivan's coriceift.'' " " r ' l ' ' We had not seen Jenny Lind "for more than1 eighteen years. At that time she was the itlot- of 'the public: we were taen at Vienna, Day and night, thousand of people were colleoted around la place Qrabonii where she wassiopping. The illustrious oadtatrice w&s-tben in. the zanih of her fomq. ' The police themselves- could not disperse the crowd, for they were bIbo under the magj- oiaii. s spellr. Use of our friends compared th'is power of fascination to that of Orpheus, W1IU VUUIU DUUUUO C1QU IfflUUlVUO UOttBUI. At lh,Bt.Jime we are still speaking of twenty years.', ago Jenny Lind- (visited America with.. Benediot and BarnUm. What a reception! , Never did a qeen on her! first tentry into her kingdom teqeive sucji a webojue. This oyatitjji, was spon taneous. . i B irnum,' Ihe king of 'JPaf,' would hot sell be tickets for Miss Lind's oonCerti at' the music stcroe; bo out . them, uo- at auction. and, thanks to tbs means, realized fabulous sums. .- People engaged seats several weekB .3 l'a' L-t. ti..j.l. .IVU ' j?-L . l. .11 u auvauo?; uiejr uuugub moui lur-.utBir weight in gouV ' -- : i-'..-.fi v -JSoarusto that we: know ever mfct with ach brilliant success; ,. we were, young at hat time, and on hearing the "Swedish Nightingale," we thought 'We hadi near known iill that moment-what tne human voioe was. v as it a woman wno waasmg- ing? Tha augl.-s in heaven could nV have softer or more delicious notes. What vigorous, ravishing 'fullness! if :- we may be allowed to connect those two adjleotives, Wbat-au angeUo spressionl That word aloue-r! auger sums, up Jenny Lind. "She an angel," said every body, and; no one could say it enough. ' 1 ' Her voice was virginity. ; no have sai ihat-itiift first time- we heard Jenny Lind was af. Vienna; she wg then in the. fullness of her power. Ten years after we law her gain, si ill as beautifuf; grand, sublime as ever. ' ' ' " ! - 1 , Lust week Jenny , Lind was to make her appearance m Lonuon, iu M. buIUvan 8 concert. We in agined a talent so imperial could never he diminished.-. What a cruel: deoep uonl It was no longer Jenny. Lind-i-it was Madame LinGoldBchmidt. We believed, we should seethe goddess of song,' but, alael we found ourselves at the play of a great actress with voice worn out, dead I Nothing, uothinirl: Charles Dickens, , in bis "Uld fJuripsity Shop," describes an old woman Who for forty years, wears mourning TorKer layer. When he died they were .both 'young and beautiful. : After hia death tne inoensoiaple woman went every . day to weep oter ;hts tomb Yi-ars rendered her old and decrepit but in the mind of the poor deluded 'soul her beloved is always young. What would she. say if he should issue from hie tomb. old and ugly? ,,(, ., , -,i She would receive pretty muou the same-tmpregsion thitt was -produced hpon us by the shadow of Jenny Lind. - la it her shadow, -even? .. , ., i,,; .- i .,; ' ,, ; Wo went agoiUj an . enthusiast, to,, hear, the "Swedish Nitingale'.'' d we found only Alas! every thing passes, away in. (his poor-World. , ' n - x :: !--J j : -, : iv . i : (. ..Perhaps she remembers a little circuni-siance pretty well known in her ,dy, in Germany. " -- . . . . 'Miss Lind w'As'dit the time' in Vienna; she was -then the full blase of her glory Hundreds pf admirers, with shouts n.; triumph,' led ' her to her theater, ...ahd.bf ck, and t-i'oivined under her Windows all night, Plaoes'were Hnattmlnabl except to Jjuraes, .well filled. : MJne day an old;woman preeen ; l.-na t-j''jiiiV .A ,f .-Mi'st ted herself at '''Jenny Lind's hotel! and re efnested permission to speak to her. Tho illustrious cantatrioe was at that moment with Meyerbeer. The old woman was introduced, and asked in a trembling voice fer,a tioket to the evening's entertainment MiSs Lind immediately slipped two into hor haad.''Vi i ;n i -c' : ; 7 ,j'WademoiBelle," said . the. old woman, 'l am. jjOjOr miserable, and unknown, now but formerly I bore a name as illustrious as yVurs. ' I wai, like you, a queen of song I have' had, like yeu, ray admirers, but ago has destroyed my voioe and my beauty neglect, oblivion has oome, and that death Lot artists a thousand times more terrible than death itself!" Jenny Lind and Myerbeer immediately demanded, her, name. . ,,That name,, I have myself forgotten, as familiar as it was at Vienna at the time this Incident transpired there; I rtimembet' the fact, howevel-, that this woman created: in Germany the role of Panama, in tha ."Enchanted fjlute.",. ; y I cite this aneodote beoause it returned immediately to my memory when' 1 heard Jeriny Ltnd at St. James' Hall. Why have not great artists, the courage to quit the scene the . moment,. 4heir prestig1 yanishes, that the publo may not he allowed (o witness the sorrowful Bpeotacle of a decayed "talent?'1 It is'painfal 'to break the statue upon il pedestal. ):l : ; i, -.. f Personal and Miscellaneous. 1 A oortespoadent at Panama writes that the natives there are among the most squalid,; most happy, and, most immoral on tie faoe of the glohe. f j I A German gardener out west,. on hip death bed'.'told his wife Where he had buried ten thousand dollars. Mourning and joy were a liUU miwl,if-!,--: - . ,.- I : Cbarletton, 8. C, has bett very, hoalthy during , the summer, the average weekly mortality not exceeding 33 deaths. :,..,.. . . The planet Venus shows in the west with peouliar. splendor now-a-days for an hour oriwoarter sunset. ' j i .i;; While unseen by Teach other;- at a Richmond auction room, husband and wife ran up an artiole from five to thirteen dollars. Tjhe wife won. 1 ; , ' It is' said that there is searoely a member of the French Court who does not owe more than he can by any Baorifioe possibly pay. Dissipation and extravagance. , ,.'. - o-A class of young girls being examined in poiitioal economy were asked, " How is Congress divided ?" AVith an air oif confidence, a sweet sixteen replied : " Civilized, half-civiliied and savage." ' ! :J . Eleven 'hundred sheep were seized at St. Johnsbury, Vi, last week, by the. -internal revenue officers. Their owners couldn't remember how many they had, and returned the 'number as seven hundred, but the officials knew better, and ienoe the trouble. ' Mr. John R. Thompson, known in America as the editor of the Literary Messenger, is saift to pe the " tleros von tsoroke of. Blackwood's Magazine, whose adventures -While in the Confederate service are soon ;to be published in book form. - ' The Carew Paper Company of South Had-ley Fall?, Mass , has just declared a yearly dividend1 of one hundred per oeat, besides reserving a fund suflioient to build an addition to. their mill. Last year the dividend was 120 per cent.' i .. The London ra devotes considerable of its space each week to a discussion Of Blind Tom's musical talent. It pronounces his feat of playing three .different tunes at the Bme time, .','a task biyoni civilization, sane people generally, and the entire white family,' , , ... ... A gipsy . woman premised -to show two young ladij-s their husbands' faces in a pail of water. 7 lneyiootea ana exclaimed, "we only see our own faces.", "Well," replied the gipsy, "those faoea will be, your husband's when you are married." Mr. Everett and Judge Story were at a public -dinner ., The ordinary, toats ''Were1 given, when Judge Story arose -and said, "Fame follows fortune where ever it (Ey. ereltej'goes " Everett replied," "Here's to the legal profession. It has nevergol above the first story ' (Story.) .-, , John Decker, of Westkii), Greene county, N. Y was Btandins on the roadside firina aeyolver, a day or two since, when Qeorge Angel came along in a carriage with two ladies. Decker supposed he had exhausted the cartridges, pointed the pistol playfully at Angel, and snapped the pistol three times, when it-Went on, the ball striking Angel in the back, just below the left' shoulder blade, and lodging, it is Bupposed, near the bowels. Angel Js expeoled to die. r . t . An amusing error appears in the columns of a leading paper in Paris. The following paragraphs, intended to have been printed separately, were by some' blunder; so ars ranged-that they read conseoutively : Dr. has been appointed head physician to the Hospital de la Cuarte. Orders have been issued Jjy ihe authorities' for ihe iui mediate extension ,oi the cemetery of; Mount Parnassee; tha, works, ore being exoouted witn ine utmost aispaicn." I Polite Gentleman-Good morning,', sir. How do you feel yourself to day ? - Deaf Gentleman Very stormy and dis agreeable. ,. !. rt r; , . , ! Polite Gentleman Slightly astonished, but determined to recover lost grojund)rii- Indeed!, How is your good wife, sir f Dear uentleman very windy ana blus tering indeed, i !,1f '" fnMonlrtfal, Tuesday , a little girl fell ower tbta wire railing that surrounds one of the basins in yiger. square, into water eight feet deen. B.h.e was saved, like Rome, by some geese..., A numqajof these warblers, that were kept there, commenced gabbling about Ihe acoident.'and attracted the gardener's attention to the spot.: He -arrived just in lime lo lescue the child. ; A story is told of a Western candidate that oame upon "a poor white man, who had a vote to i give, if he did . do his own milking - The eondidate, Jones, asked him if ho should hold the cow, wbioh seemed to be nnase, and the old man consenting very .readily, he took her by the horns and held fast till the operation was done. "Have you had Robinson (his rival) round here lately' be asked. "Uh, yes, he s i behind the barn, holding the oalf !" - A naturalist says': "Last summer, while in my park, I observed a green woodpecker light on th ground some htteen paoes before me, look around to see if he was ob served, then lie down and simulate death by Blretohing hlmeelf motionless and hang ing his tongue out as far as possible. He occasionally pulled in his tongue. He had selected a place near an ant hill. The ants, thinking him dead, would oover his tongue to devour mm; wnen it was biacs wits ans, he would swallow them, and repeat the trick until his maw could hold no more. That wo.dpecker was not as green as he might have been. -: The last scene of .the "Black Crook" at Niblo's Garden, New York, requires the services of seventy-one night men to move and arrange the scenes, work the traps, etc; eight day men to dear the stage; one head property man and fire assistants; two pyrotechnists; nine gas men; six calcium-light men; wardrobe master and five assistants; eostnmer; two armorers; thirty-five children; corps de ballet of thirty American and twenty-three English girls; three premiere and nine solo dancers; a ballet master and six scenio artists. In all, a total of two hundred and eighteen persons,, besides the dramatic people who are not here enumerated. COLLARS. C3 .0;-.JL. JL.Fl (' Possess advantnges KNOWN TO NO OTHER MAKE, O-.'nUimug'. the Strength and Flnlahsjf the finest Line Collars, aud being made mr" perlect and tasT'tttiug. -, -'. ' ,' -i- .. ,llaeiei-ywhsra,.( , (... ootllw- GIFT CONCERTS $ioi;oo4 Op ! Special Card! -.- - :;. I - . 1 . .. . ... i. OFBNING FAIR COMMRNCSIK September, 24th lilt,, ' .m:.k - i ' ' ' Aid Is now la JuU blast, at thtf commodlon rtow, ,:-- . '-' : ' :I : '.. .. J ,. i .. "''J' ,,, . ,.JVo. 103 West I'enrtU Street, Where the PUKMimrS ARE ON EXHIBITION. ThU Fair promlwa to be one of the most shocam- ful evorheld Is it Wwt, ndfthrU aodoobt that H wiij.do very naiwiBctory, to all IB. patrunf . xne manager ana vireetory, nave arcldeq to-eoa t utiie air i wo wneas, ana, at iu close, ' t It' : 1 '.-'' I -I I ! FIFTY" T30USAN0 PREMIUMS ! : - :- WOKIH 101 tOO, , j ' ''f' -:.:' t: :- n j Will be 'diftrltiBtod among' the t(iketholJr. Among the premiums maj.be meotoaed oil of . , , . ' : - . - -1- - f: - T ; ' ' .,.- $10,000 In. Oreenjbacks! '- r-.:- : .: .'i t. Pi (--;:'!, : . ! I : Tbreo''eirble Olty Bnldeaces. worth tS.KIOi, nair of Matched (larilage Hore. worth Sl,fiO0; let of f arior rnrnitnre, worth si.wu; urano riano, worth SL009; Horn, Buggy and Harneu, worth 11.000; magnificent net of Bridal Varnftare, worth S750; inia XTI Pl.oo, Worth 870O; heavy Qold Magic Uase Watch and Chain, worth (700; large Cloater Diamond Ring, worth tSsO; Saddle Hone with Saddle and Bridle, worth (500; Torklih Tapestry C-.rpet, worth (450; splendid Carved Bldebord, worth (260; together with i: - . - ? 49,885 ADDITI03TAK, PKEMIPMS, Cprth from Two Hnndrtd OItacrfiwDwaTd. eon-fltsting of Ladles' and Genu' Gold Wateb.es and Ohaios, donble sat of Stlvrplated Oarriage Uar. am '. Plated Tea Seta. 811k Drew Pattern!, Silver and Plated War.v fine Buggy fiarneaa,, Opera-glaatM, ewiog-maohioea, flue Furniture, eilver Watchea,. Ladies' and Qonta' Baddies, M osic -Boxea, Wrltiog Desks. Work Bcxes. Qreeobacks. Diamond BIuks and Breast-pins, Solid Gold Jewelry', Slr?f Spoaus, una uovkB aud Albcmba, aai a great variety ox useful aud oruamental articles, fully desibed.iB Catalogues. ' 1 ' - ' A Catalogue win oe sent to any address on receipt of stamp for return postage. - - I Th Premiums are on exhibition at the Fair. TloUetsi) SO Oont I - And at. the Ibllowfog CLUB . R ATE S:. ! as Tickets loone lcIress,......Sia OO 50 " ' - 33 OO 100 " 45 OO aoo- ' . - ! s7 so All mifi by mall must ioclse.stamDS to pay re turn postage. .. . . j rjlnbe and liidl bldualti who nnrch&a lOOir mnra tickets may deposit funds for the same in bank. snh. jeot to our 6rdervArrBa tbv distribution shall have Deen made, according to adfertised terms. The certificate T any bank itt good ataudlng,. setting torth the e nlract on whloh tee dapoalt Is received, will be taken Iti payment for tickets till the 8th of October, provided the cartiflcate is not-lor a lea amount than (45. - : ISS Ail the Premiums will be readv for delrverv as' soon sfc the omctal Hward t : anuouneed. Tbe award will be printed, la full, and a oo;.j sent to every tioket-hol-Jer. ) ' l"w omers ihat may b received after tl ikets are all sold, or too Utje.to fill ,ft-omaBy cause, th-stone win us iviunuru, lur lut) tiiwnijr ui hh luliy.f' merit, refereace. Is Bade. to most of the prominent bu-inest men of Cincinnati. , - av Address all orders to - - :. :-- . J. St, HAWI.GT fc CO., MiHAOtBS AND 0ENBB1L AoSSTS, No. 14 visa Slreef, octl 2tM&W OifrciINNAT-I, OHIO. PIANOS. LIGHTE, LlQJtTE, And Musics . . i 3 iitjb xi a. tm o s. Thb Best in Uss.. ' ' ' ISl'EY'S OROAN WITH TREMOI.O. ' ' ' I SO LB AGKSTS FOU OB 10 AND INDIANA. Agents wanted in every comity. 1 OfcH and t xamine for jour.elves. " . ... HABBIfi A 00. v Norlu nivb street, Colam1a,Ohl Wrh. ZInabe & Oo.'s "i FIBST PBEUinU GOLD MBDAL fitrniid, Square and Upright rpHESE INaTKOSKNTR HAVISfJ BSSN Bl-L PrjRB the- pobtte tor the past thirty years. nave, upon tneir exceiieuoe alone, attained an aa. pHrchate-1 pre eminence that pronouaces thn an. equalled. - i., ..... Their TONE combines m-eat cower. richoeM. eweetnesa, aud flue singing qnwlity, as welt at great purity ot intonation ana nartuoBlousaess tnrougn out the entire scale. -' i ' Their I OUOH In pliant and elastic, and Is entirely iree li-om tue stiBness found In so many pianos, which caftess tha'oer'nrmer to so easllv tire. In W0SKS14NSaiP they cannot ba exoeUed. Their aililn is constructed with a oare and atten tion to tterypart taenia that eharaoterixes th nuest nuwuanlBm. None but toe best seasoned material is asrd iu their niannfactnre. aud they will accept the hard usage of toe concert room with that ot the parlor upon an equality, nnalected in hir melody; in fact, tby are consttucted "KOT FOB a veau, but Foasvca." Ail our Square Pianos have our new improved G:and Scale and the patent A grafie Treble. , . Wareroomi No. II A 13 aai SUttaBt., Ooluxxt'bu.siy O. : - aa41y. . JOHN SEL"' ZSB A 00. Ag'ts. : INSURANCE. il Insnraica Se Iavestiiient Co. COLITMBUS, OHIO. Office, ::::::: No. 8 Opera BalMing. (!nvUl Stock, $150,000. W A. HAN LEY, President. CIEO. I. t'RANE, Heo'y. , , sep!8 tf THE GREAT WESTERN American Horse Insurance AND DETECTIVE CO. rrtHt OLDKST COMPANY OF THB KIND IN X the Uulted States. Insures Horses, Mule and 0ttle against Aocident. Death and Tbet. Agentn wanted. J. T. PAINS, Aatuary, Office. Buckeye Block, ui16 ly Over Repress Office SVflEOICAL j C. C. MUnr, 5a. ., Keif eric Pfcysician & Snrgeon HAVINO LOCATKD IN COLUMBUS, BBBPNOT-FULLT tenders his professional servloes to the o!trMns thereol aud vicinity. All dlrwras trmted rrlthout mercury. ' Otllce, on Courdi At., between State A Broadway ,,.t.i. amr neoo nn lyr Dir. Stevens & Co. I1AB PKVOTKD F1VTC1CN TRABS IN OIM 1 AOINNATI tothr imtment of I'frrate Dlne.sf t, Tui-y wntsr tn'en a cnt. . without tu. nseof mercury --r I1 Torms oi Priv its Diseaskb, especially those ol --oiht eianilng.. Uos of sexual power restored in a pw weeks victim of self-abuse 'and excesslT. Yf-.f.- y, suerlos; from Spermatorrhea, speedilycur-.4.- -1' r ons at a diotauce treated bv addrenlug Pi SMfVKNS A Oj 2H)WiutB.,betunrthan4 eiitn, vincinnan. suraoiy DRY lCObbs T: NEW,EAttG-0Oj)S, O. EBERLY & C0.J Sti-eef, Wo. 804 T Sontk ' High i . ,r V. ,NBW .ASO KvSLL : lA BK BB0K1VISO il adjected stock of I-j . j -. -u . I , " J ' '! ';- r I' - n . . -r I . 'i .-t t .1 e-T.. rt At Extremely Iw Prljpca.: MERINOS, ". .' .. ,",' .vpoi-'fLAba, KMPKEa CLOTliS,,. AJ.PACAS. . i COBURQS,. .. . , -DEUINES, ftp, &c. AAOHWfiS, .oiBAliML9RAX SKI Rim, r if. -(-.):. - ...:,"... . . i Hoop Skirls in Great Variety, - . GINGHAMS, ,i ,, ..FLANNELP, 't-f-..ll.. i..-. i. ... I - CLOTHS .; . .. ,; .CASSlMEfiES, ;. DOESKINS, ; BAXIMBtS, , TWEEDS,.. . , , , JEANS, WOOLEN . YARNS, - . . , . ! ' ', j T. ,.;,:, MOMErMADE fLANELS BeSprearf8,'! Blankets J Coveriei in .1 Great Tsrpety ! A large stock of Mens' and Boys' Hats and Caps, lower that cm be btughtlu the city. , ! v j ,. We hava slmaddad to cur stack a. rice JelAetim, Of Tapestry, 8ply, Ir grain, gialr and Hemp Car- irato, vbb wiu- si oajerevi as xtreiMiy-iw prloea .. . C. xJBlBIr A CO., '" - fFcSMM oor.aigk and Friend sts., M"?8 .j . PolnmbusjOhlo. HARDWARE I J. M. STUART .An'C . 1 011 .. in n ,n.-i,: Hvawhotarara A Wbvtetolsaud Betail Dealers in -' ' ':! : : r. ,.it. j.;.,:.. j Tin,Oopper,'!i And Sheet-Iron Warel Also, Dealer la. LAWSON'Sj HOT AIR FDjRlJACES.B -! LotaeHi Superior 1 CnKltab : Ciwktiuc Superior i Cngltsb: , BaasTew, 1 : - 3 I n Grates. Whtte MarU,nd If arbleixed Slate and Iron Mantles. Ac., sc.: and Sole Aaenta for Pl r Stewart's Large Oven, Air-Tight . , . "COOKIftG STOVE, I V- :- ' Asl th Notsd- A, Ij X I Or A. 1 O " COAL i COOKING BTOViw i ' tarSeod . ' I DYEING. Fancy Dyeing and Scouring ESTABLISHMENT, -A No. 8 East Town street, c -t i - (Opporila franklin National ank,)! '" ' !' COLUMBUS, OHIO. - : i ' ' W floods Kecelved and Betarned by Hxnress.,. augteod lyt ' : - . I SCHOOLS. OHEQARAY INSTITUTE. ; -v.' no i ii'ii.. K . ! i (Freneb ltnd Engrlisb),'7 j F O B IT O tJ & L I D I E s . ' ' ' ) . ' BOAEDINO AMD DAY -PUPIL9, 1,S27 AND 1 S2 Spruce street, Philadelphia, Pa., will openonTtTURSOAT, SKPTBMBBB 20. Board and tuition, per niwt..MM..., I 9450 ao ao,, ao, tor two or more .-' suiters, (eaoh. .i . Hw.-'........-.;...4,...iM 400 French ia av.laniraaeV of tha famiW.1 and ia conotautly Bpokan.i.n the Iii4tltnte j' eoa asutKiummiLLi, :, Ml?m ll WII8 ., . , Principal. MEDICAL BOARD. . TAJAIt.DKPAKTMINT. fj : - ' BUBOBOIi-OKHf BAL'S OmCt, Wasbikotom, D. J., August 0, 1866. A N ABUT MEDICAL BOARD, TO ODNSIT IX. or Brevet DM Duel J. B. Brown, botbod. u. s, A , Sresldent;. Brevet . Lle.utenut-Oolpnel H. B. Wirta, Surgeon, U." S. A. i Brevet Lieutenant-Colo nel, Anthony Heger, U. 8. A and Brevet Maior WarreS Webster. Assistant Scrgoon. U. B. A.. Be- eorder, will meet in New Tork City on the 30. h of September, next, for the rxaminattonof, candidates tor aamission into tne Meawai Btan or ue u. a. Army. '' - .... ' Applicants must be over 21 years of age aad physically soonit - ' ' i Applications for an invitation to appeaVIefore the Board should ne aoareisea ro tne eurgspuea- eral, U; and must state the rail name, rest, dunce, and date and place of birth of the candidate. Testimonials1 as to character nd qualifications must be furnished. If the , applicant basjbeeaJa the Medical Service of th- Army darl-r ih? war. the faot should bette4('tcgether with, kit former rank; and time and place of service, and tenttmo. rialv-from th bfflcarawith whom he bai erve4 should also be forwarded. . . J Mo allowance Is made for the expenses of persons unre-going the examination, a it la aa.lniTBpaiisa-blepr requisite to appointment. ThTO are at present sixty vhcaaciM la tte MeA icalr StaflT,: forty Tslx o,' prbich are. original, bipg crpateu oy tue act or uongress, approves, juiv Bfiih. UHft. ... t .: JOH. K UAE1I1CS -J anglt eod toctl6 ' Surgeon -Qneral U 8 A. COSMETtC i 4 tt . ? "'' ' MADAME SlotVAfcl .' r. - :jl H t'.'ir. - - it' Xjetc5Lls'. Toilet., T WILL BEMOVB ALL SBUPX10N8 OF IHB Skin. Fncklej, Tetter, Tan or 'Chap from the lira, and lnusart s frathnsaaand a yontbtaLfraatJu ness which noother cosmetic or powder'wltl do.. It Is ao tnoispersaoie ftrtlow lor laorw w, ana e for sale bv all uruigitts. - ' B'lnTSBf saABino. ijloi NOB C0, Sianolsctuters, ihii wawut street. BubdsalA Bsos.. DruVglstev WholMalej Agents, cir. Alain A front sm.( Cuciuaati, O. . sepao lau -. .. . .. - . i- '- PERFUt-lERY. Penney's--Byjtian 'Lotus, t..', iw taT y J Biti - CANDKEKCJirikE-1 PGNKKT A t'., I am t'fUtomAvenne, BrookIyn,N. x. For sate tt mofoturw-B tirtees bf J . ,h,. , HABBJp eiGLBtt, ' Wholesale Kotiou Dealers,-1 ' -., ..i ft -r. -107 sad-.lieHsHt Tows street.-1 And by all Diugglsla in Uolnmbns, Ohio, and Fancy Goods D eslera. '' ,;1;:' aogaS3m - COmL COAL ! v. COAL I COAL ! iVufral Shaft Cl Mitel ... i "tTAvfNQ WtTHINTflN'TAST TwAB.erjS1 A 1 1 8hft and dielopod a flns vela af , Cm' of Sn?rlor (Qnalili, ' ' .-.,( wo- 1. , ... It... I '-" - ' We take pleasure in announcing to the putMlo ti i,i - Sr" now pr:rsei to supply ss articHe thst ef S OTB E ,8 0 R PA 8 8 E D i - Bylauy Bank to fh 'Stat..' 1 ;" :.. viiesir. to sen or paroaas lit. btock. bsl Awtat " iaoOBOBiWO LIAMs 00 , Petroleum Lans,or Oil Stocks.-J7B :riTT fJanpb.U Utatiwi, 0,0. B.B. ' majrlOdtf ASDKW WFUrOH, J -a-raiiiiia fi-i.Y . :i,.vv i "" ' : - -.: CLOTHNC. n .iilA'3 to y: Ready-Hade Clothing ! .ifirh ytkOZESALti AND RETAIL, Hff 'IW-HV- l!f !kl ,i III... ' is Xeiclii4ut l?&iloz CL0TH3. - -;i u-itr. 0A6iMERK3H- . - ....T,. -r. .-,... ;WeeD3' ?tT i-it ESXINOS. ASD Penis' FoVMhuigwftw. JOSEPH ClVltACmEHEIIKB, ... ... II'MI-III f .I'H f v., rjlAKES PLSASCBB IS INroBMINQ HIS OLD f-. - - , uu .uc ,VDnM puuilO, UCt SI BIS Utdt returned: rrooi ttaa. Buterafvillw with the larg Ht ami tuHtk aIai.H aiu.W nf . . . . . . nip iiuv uihaLrie lur ton kiwd, smufWHBg : ' :ai!. i-.ii'ini. VreuchT Ingflsli'aaf Sfttau8, Fa r and winter werxjoats, and Boita ot "Every liasorJptton, 'both Foreign ver offered in tUaru other market. Oall aaA aaa my goo4s before buying elsewhere, and ba eon- iuuru tua rnars ine sesx venctea atocK in tue mrkat,Bd.a, cheap as any other hou dare aelU To fhoae who have nnndnt with their mlmn. age--ta tefMIvm taaakfal, and can now aaaura theia41u( tt canseHJSia a-oods which will be satisfactory. -l-.Tl ' . The Uerchant Tailoring department is under tha charge Mr. J. B, FTrniai, from. Hew York, whose reputation Ibr vrellmadA garmaota needs ao comment. . A flneand fn1tasortmentof Children's Clothlnt: oonstaatlv on bod. apr21 6m DRY GOODS. UYJBJB & LAJWDEIX, Fonrttt Ar,ci 8ts., PbiIIpnlaPa. ABB JOvrEBIXO. ON T3 jjfcsf OfHfABM8 A full stock of FALL-DVY-GOOBH nnestockof . SHAWLS; Fin. stock, pf ILK; Fine stoek of DBESS GOODS; Fine s"ck of WOOLS SH; Flu. stoe wsLit.resilXiDe stock of FANOT OOODS.Ac, Ae .New and desirable Goods daily received' and sold at smalt advance', WwwLBSALK. September sum, moo. Sep' daw w r rt i,. :. iiii Tr - 9'IJ li 33 WholesalerjityZ Qpo&s iitir.'" ' unaif J fc IV E.t MlttEB & JOYCE BtO TO JiNNOUNOB TO TH TBAtB IN OITT siid country, tht they bava opened, ia their new building, 7 '"T Ccrntr AAivb and Losg streets, ."'IH r The Ltrgsst sMWti.at ot Dry Goods ' &' Notions Brer cff-Ted to ths trae Id this sctiBa, it. of which have been purchaed for CASH, ssdsnattrtlk. most fsvorablo drcumstanses of the markets. W. invite dealers to call and examine our f-xtbesiv. stock. and we p sdge oniwlvec ts supply Abwcn-st aa low prices aa they can purchan , in ,tha j cheapest markets in the country. UolvmaaaHtptambriHriSD,TR sep2Atf New Goods! ftew GoodsF J. D. USBOJ&N tt QO., HATE J0S1S BIOS1VC0 A LABOB STOCK o New Goods, oosprisiug ". a. n. i e: w s , ' . I ii-- ,it' Oil OloOkie And all -Bitr Hoiiee Furnishittg. Z A3111s.es. 91lSB,-iB, -- - .- -.-:. i- :'i-U Aad s'l.lnds pf .JjU, Fancy Dress Goods! i A 1,30 w.ui Cassimercs, flannels,'' Muslims. I', n: : ..-..rTii.L-ii'o A full llne-of noatlca.OUvea, Hosiery. Ac, Ac which will be sold very tew f.ir'c8H. seplS lm CROCEK3 McGolmiMile's j& Ms&pnald : ,-' i: l-j-.'-V 2jll..J .lit ' "' 1 '' " ' "'oprlotST'4"or ' ' ;-: Cilombas Powder Magazine I - ;.T!i.--Trf !.!. in? ' ."Aud'igenfs for Fhipp's &',Oa.'s Hams M AS covYrrTpB.s, ANi;coyE. .. JadI'66 dly OLtTMBUS, OHIO. COMM!6SIONHdU3ES EDWiED i. V1TGB. t C E -if Ef.-Fitoli '--" 'COIiOMBITB, OHItKf "' --''" ''. ''- BBAiBrj : --n. ! Flour, eraln;r $&lt,twtnt9 AMD PAODOCK QIKKKAIA.t' BestdnMiity or Hol and Cold Blast Pit; iron Buvrnys on iiut:ti - 8peoial Trsvnsfer 4 Shipping Agent " - ' or vssi hmm i O. A O, B., Oentral Ohiq and p. .q.jt O. B. B -in. jti s .L,mrauT0B or.,THs' Columbus, 'Ihllliootlia Portsmouth - '-i )-(Packet C'ouipnajr.- And Soioto .and '. ilockintj ' Valley Express rrelaAI-UastUt AdKBTsor HocKtNO Vallst Salt CoMPAitr H. FITOH A SON rlveThrnurhOontrMCBon Pro. duo sad Freightr from all points oa the Oanal to tne pastern -;, by kail, lake, or UAPAL. Warehovet, Eatl and Wett End'bf Scioto . 's Bridge, foot tf Broad St. . OFFICE, 87 WEST BROAD S'tlEET. JSBl'oSlyra ' AJID. . - ' :! , ,1;4,.sy Htl . pETROtErW JEXfHANEI - - - -t - .ji i . ,-i . .. I HAVF. PPENBd' A , 1. 7-slD .1 . , r K TB OL1 FJ K E x e n a. j g n in i ,,f IN THB SODTH-WBST OOBNI'U'F THBtV'cT Ode. building, where I shall be 'ple-sed t.. nr. "f gows, noon reesoaabW tmm., with altpersops.ho r i

tebMs of subsckiptioh ' 0II.t-Ote 8.Ur, eob lntkHl..................O 7 ' .,, Special noiiGM uor bquuo. Moh inwr- , i. 1,1 ' i," Local and ItiMiMu Noting. nr Una. Slnfflanbseribers.1 vear. bv msdl. SlnatoSnhachbera. 6 months..'. ,..,-. 4 60 ' ' each insertion . 0 SW STugm Subscriber., S months," ft a: lb-wIum 1 month. " S SS 0 80 i -WaBkLIUn Square, .sohiiisertion... ...... 1 M Single Subscribers, T msnth, dc)rnred..A. 0 90 SI ogle 8nbscritMrs,1Mr week, delivawsl.,, .' 0 To Agents.in clubs, 16 cents per week each oopy. :. i TIBJSS Or VBC -M-WSXX3.V 10PBSAL. I year 14 60 I months.-.,,, 12 S . f .. " Local and Business Notices, per Hue, m.-M-.., Mrh lowrtion v..:...:....... 0 30 ..(:. '; atrOn Square covers three-iuarters an inch "t .paw in toe ooiuruus oi vn. joum.. , . Mrr!ns N tlce -50cts., when under t've linns. S monta... 1 U 1 1 saonth. .0 COLUUS,; MORNING, OCTOBER 2, 1866. 5 , Book and Job Muting UKttly promptly feti. NUMBER..6S. iUrnl or TH vmtl WSMUr Single SnbamiberB, par jtrr. TERMS OF A1VEUT1M1XU. ..,J 'O 1 if V'i V f A MORNING JOURNAL 4 (tier N. Et t-ite tttrret. A ft. HO TO TOWK8U1B COM- ... V desire to call your attention to tue oesi(y of inorcssed vigilance' upon, .he' pari of yourself and working Union men throughout tho Slate. It is now well known .i that the Copperheads are reviving, so far as poes-ble, the old Knights of the Golden .h"rV ano -eaiing that will- not answer thoir purpoHes, by false am spurious pre- -1'iiBses they aw endeavoring to oatoh the yonog and unwary, and especially the sol- . (iters. .1 be machinations of these secret orders hhauld be frustrated. Watph,tiiem oama their rjiaus, undi eipoee theni when possible, Their very existence is dangerous to Jiberty and Republican institutions, and mould bo uu'.ver8uy denounced. We are confident, that with a fair and honest elecl ( ' tion and full vole, the day is ,.ours. Buj, .,we nTe reason to believe that gifeantio enemes of fraud are being organised by me Copperheads by importing potest falsi. fication of poll boq and stuffing of baj lot Does. In view of this, allow us to ex ' h rt you - ' ' - ' . j .. , 1st. Let every ballot box be examined en the morning of ihe. election before a frolftis I s , , ' - 124. Let an efficient challenging oammit-te be appointed to' stand at the polk from 6 o'clock A. M. 1 until. closed, to challenge ry man (iffer'ing to cast a ballot, not known to be a legal voler, and when, challenged, to insist that lie befut to answer un-' ' &ri''batK as to nis qualification, ncnording to ' the Statute ' j -',-,,! ' 3d. When Ihe polls are closed, Ao not ' permit' the ballot box to be taken Away before counting, anless oue trustworthy jUaion man be always present with it.' " j ... i. .After, opening the box, let a tompe tisut oomm'ittee of reliable Union men r-' nihin with the Judges until' alt suobj voles " lounled and the poll books eertiied te See that I here is no changing of Tote's, that ' f hey are correctly rrad and recorded, And 'lae reeult Is correctly stated and certified in the poll books. Coder Ihe Statute' of 1 Ohio, eaoh candidate f or ' a State, District, or Couuly office, has a right to have tw6 of his friends present during the euliit time of eouuiing the voles and certifying jhepoll boohs Under this Statute let Union men Mildly demand their rights. j 5th. Exhort all your Union voter to be ' t the polls early, and if possible remain "during the day. ! ,, " 6ih. Make ample arrangements 'to get the sick, the infirm, the aged and this help- ;' lea to the polls. : I ' ' 't'h At 2 o'clock P. M. of election day, make a Hat of all the Union men who are absent, and at once send outandull to the polls ll absentees, j j ,j i -- f . t 7 . . 8th, Get each of your . School litlriot Cminnte-.mn to see each Union voter in k a District on the day before the eljeotion, '' ' and to furnish eitcb with two tickets, re- questing him to vote one, and , get his n ighhor to vote the other. ,i J i I i Finally, let every honorable 4iethg and ' '" " fffort t resorted to in order to secure every " ' vote'for the Union lioket possible, land to .. prevent the ewine from being overwhelmed i t by a fraudulent and maoutaoiured vjote. RlnlOKl. j The, New York journals speak of Ristori, . sinco her brsi appearance in the sanie high praise as be 'ore Comparing, or rather contrasting her with Rachkl, the Tribune saye: ' 'Ouce fairly seen, we wonder thataoom-pariscju. should evejtave been suggested between Ristori and RaoheL There is no 1 likeness between tbea. Kiutori is a Roman; Rachel was a pure Greek. R'stort is "Niobs," 'Clytie," ";he Ariadne;'' feaobel i was a virgin of tho Panathenaio fc'rieie. . RsloJ-i is a graud, large-hearted, passion-ale, beautiful beiii)i; Rachel was intellectual and o i'd, with passions slowly roused but creeping with intense earnest to their aim. ' ' ,., t: , Tb pure, still beauty of the Jewess, her lithe gra:e. her ur.consoious attitudes that filled the memory with statues, her voice that rang all the changes of passion, hatred corn, fury, contempt, despair, but eo sel- , dom trembled to Ihe breath of love; her eye, that froz -, or lascinated, or mtde the heart grow small with tear, that uould burn like a, tender coal with hate, but never melted to a burning ray; her frame, so frail, so shadow-like, that, would have moved our ' pt'y if the soul that lived and burned in i every fibre of it had not seemed so mighty to hold its tbroDf ; wh-kt bad thi woman' in common with Ristori?, and yet Ristori's greatness is now touched by (he unlikeness. ' Them is oue glory of the sun od anoth-er,f lory of the moon, ami we are glad that t these two. women of genius ate so ditterenl that while we are in the presence ; of the one w uro not forced to contrast! nor to cooi'i'are her with the other. Aiid if orig-, inainiy. lie a proof of genius, tben it is not poaaibl'? ' deny that Ristori has keoiue, Stfl recalls no artist that living eyes have behe'd. Least of ail is she to be compared 1 with R-tehel -so long misnamed her rival. She can do muoh that Rchel never did, much that Rachel never would have at teuipiud; and, for our own part, we frankly confess that when the tumult of emotion ' ' in which we le't the theater bad, in a ineas re, passed away, there had passed with it a mis' or prejudices and msoonoeptl ns that had veiled this woman from our fair judgment) bu', thanks to her genius, it pass- d, and henoeforth her majeBtic figure etan'ls in the memory, a separate splendor, an individual glory. aPHEMi'DNI IAI Of HeH- R ANU FRt.K, SPEECH.; .... Th Hwapltalitleia of Jlenipbla. ' From hi Hrinphia Avalatcbo. We undereland that a move is on;fnot in this city in invite Henry Ward Beecher to visit Memphis, lo enlighten our people as to their duly in the existing political crisis. If Mr. B ecber Gomes hereof his own accord, or if at. ihe invitation of the Radioal party, to address them, we have no objeo . tion, uud he will have accorded lo him that respectful hearing wb:ch a deoently be-h tved public speaker will always meet in Memphis. But weproleBt against the hu- milistine abjection into which Memphis will sink whenever this Puritan peddler of religion and polittos is digmned with a so lioitatioit from our people to come here and , tell hem what to dj He has been our life ldua bitter, implacable, relentless enemj ' and wo dishonor ourselves whenever we a tire to bis favor or decorate- him with umnlim:nt irr nntioe. " L t us not be deceived by Ihe small demonstration he has recently made in our liehlf His craven sml h -B already caused him to qunk? before the indignant frSwn of his Radical proselytes, and he is now ai ever our enuuy. Let these gentlemen, who-an Himrised to do honor lo Ibis Sharp's ' RifleJBeecher make a pilgrimage to Fly moulh Cliurot), ttrooaiyo, u arur uim. u . were better thatmhey should go there at the expense of tlveir own pocket., than that he should eome here at the expense of the dig-. nily and honor of the true people of Memphis If he comeB, let Anna Dickinson and Beast Battler be included in the invitntion.. For the comfort of those careful ladies who have -excellent t otd-fsshioned silks packed away in their wadrot-es, let us add hat Bayadere si ripen horizontal stripes. 1 will be highly popular, and the raiment, which has beeu disretpeotfully spoken of as the "duds" shall, renew its youth as the eagle. " v'' '' -UO.'lil' :!f., " i.isl'lu 'is . ,rli,bu!', 'fGkNltskiiii'6V 'r'nis'toittroS IMay ask yoar indftlgencef one'mst sected 'de tention, that I may be able to make bvysolf heard. ' we are- met here upon the ifncst momentous issues ' eter- pTeetei foiecny.' body. ofi men,, and. Ao-Uo inch iod of nrn waa.ifver,. before a;jrrnBntaiettioii presented for adoption., . You "are lesUei --i...i'i! .'.V-A-.lu J'it,.i-a.il-ii. and thOet rights ailif that oottrs of govern-ment for whiohiou fotulrlt .Hb.Jthi field. Applause. iVKe ja'8H(ih ' welll Vp? wnen the laat jebel surrenuerea ana wnen W arnts ver lotpf ion warjwhere; that ceace and nnitv and concord snouid nrevau. But, unfortunately ' for the' bounti-yi iBome evil tlrongnfcwtered, inth'thei'heart !of Hiie. rJxecutitre et itha H aUotu a oesumi ng lominf aelf BtengtJUf,mind aMoiuxpose to deal with a flueattp yrbush he ehouw naTe. pron oenled lo the whale ffovernmeUt ' Of ' the United States' innCon'gVeSB;8mblediidie: uidsrtoaiBj bf hii iotm- til,, to Tectoistrtirjei the oouairyj. It was0iacL the power todoi which, no President had ever before oliJi ed. , The, question et admiUiRg State iMo the Union had more than once be TW sented to this Government. K.nsa8, we all remember:'.'' Mlesoltrt 'Taeeef beyond, Ub nenory m pmivji Vfofi fa ouv if listory telle, us ,UiaL,.Uie ,opunpry, divided unon the Question upon what "terms Mi sour! should be ftdmitted.' Did the then Bxo-t eCull vej able1 and eonstilirtional la wy er.U) at,i- be vras.-Miaj ih then jjixeotutM- oMim, Joy his fiat, by its policy he . could, say thow a State was to oome into the Union Ylffvit was refbrred; to the Coltftfress of the" United States. But passing' on, tne present jexeaii- 'lve gavejwhatf hevoaJted, an.oxpentnental government, toeach of the Slates, for j which Inave earehedin-.TsliLto j64ny eonsfi-tutional authority. .What won the States thai had revolted trout Ihe Union? iFqr in. ttai que&i6n.a to-,'wni6h'"I ' purpose jto call jour alien tion: for few-meaiente, ill seems to me the whole issue is here and.no r to bo determined. Yea remember that beoause Abraham Linobln was eleoted eleven! States with the sympslbV"ef 1 Some "two' oi1 three more icrelud from"th IUninr seised all the ncoperty,a,ndldroye out .every jreatige of union authority and Union powers; armed themselves against the ' constituted mh or-ity of the country; confederated themselves into a tinfnn arid government, raised Wrtntali' and attempted to inaugurate :and set afloat a navy, and put1 themsePret in such position that the Supreme Geurt of.the United States deeided. that aUitlje .people on this territory were , national enemiee, 'eiiwged In a olvil and territorial war. rferejatihis noint. felloW-Wldier. we should: tron la Mnr aider What' wa theie oC(lition.au they were not at thatfjime out of the ynv, cer tain it, is that .the. Union, was bur of hem. Laughter. j;; Standing' 'juitl tlftre my ' Comrade sailors, when' . we1 Ipassed Tort i Jackson, bade , tfce idesid.! it the immortal , Fanagut , did ,..,WB believe that Louisiana hdd all her rights in theUnidh at that time ? , You, who landed at Port Royal, ' afieV that most brilliant bombardment, fellow soldiers, did you? believe that South CarelinA iwaa then ia.theUnioh, with all her rights and privileges as a part oi the growing power ot this Union I Vlcariy not. Toen let ns follow otf for a few -moi ments, beoauae if there is any' man eo stupid here., as to ,Jbelieve, thV ak,tha!t.,lime South Carolipahad all her, rights) in the Union aS a" part1 of the governed, him have I offended, and he had better take hie hit and go Co dinner, for 1 shall not addr!3 . nim nyt longer, LApjiuse,.,! - jnjw then, with varied success, at, Gettysburg, Wntie-lam and a thousand other baUI'78, of which' you are the repreeenl'itives," tb"war was- fought out. w-0 -trgree that at the) time I have' spoken, 'the beginning "Of the war, these :men. had. no rights ;ia;h: Union. Then the,war was fp.uj(hlr quU IVjiat was" the next step in the progress of tie nation? Alt' the armed soldiers representing! hese meb surrendered itbemselves prisOuers of warl Mark that,,; Surrendered .themselves surrendered themselves,- aud.tbop-i'ights, and everything they had to our' vicjtorious arms. TApplauee.1 Is (here any 'man here who will eliira 'that by Surrender men get rights? i.r Applause la theraBy man here who will claim ; (hat a mau conquers by saying "I give up?" Applause. Then they got no rights.1 What di they beiiome What did ttfey claim they were ? What did they claim amnesty as? As paroled prt3- onars of wan. s ftow 4hor -my ddubttrk friends, if any there are here, ,i(S nqt a pa roled prisoner of war .pretty poor material to make sovereign States of this Uh on out of? Great Apprause.JI'-1 ''it-o t What were the mates then in inteldmont of public law? What were-, the .Stites in intendment of National right and, of; evsfry decision of every court hud1 every Jurist? They were bdl oamp of paroled prieoneirsy under Ihe guard of our soldiers, see thai nobody mojefsted thfcm so, long as they behaved well. .Now, then, I ask yptl right here, can theW'be ' any ' doubt iti ' the' lan guage Of your resolutions, 'that the "Congress of the United -States, :.Teprsenting the G(y-erament; pf lie (Conquering army jof the Uattea plates, nave luit rights to make all necessary rolts and regulations for the gov ernment of ten cimps of parrlod'prisojer of war? ) I4 not diseusstheaustidn what you call thom. , 1 deal with the qjiest'ion ui .'.,i e.,1. t.nI-i it...'1 may oall ihem. territorier,i--oonqueTed pvtM- vinees. anything but oar governors U. wqH Stand that.' Applause But I have heard lav BUPUiDnj, wuiun is tnw eira auu tviui, lu Alpha and Umetaor H argument against rt, to this effect, "AVsil.Jl dou't, undirStaMi you there, you jay that a Stale has no rignt to secede, you say that the States tried to. seoede, ana you wutppea mem ana prevent ed them; then you say ! that they v not 'id Union; how do you reooaoue. that I j Let us for a moment , deal,, with that ..argument. What do we .say precisely ? we ay that no act of si Btate, Or the Governmentj of the United States even, can alter the gela tions of a. single ouizen or, this govern ment to useir. without his coasenivi we say that, ho State can take al single foot'' "of " American ' .oil -' from I under the authority of the Amerioan -government or the protection of the .American flatr. We nav the oblicrations of every man remain the same to the U hilled' 8tates."Tle distinction we make' if "hiB they' lof t, their rightt by the crimes they oommitlet , while thev did not get rid of their obligation! Thev had rishta as a part of thin Gevern- -F-- : :... . .. . , . ment, as estates in tnis union; mey Baa oo-ligatiohs as citizens of the United j Sta'.ep. Let me give you an eiampie laminar to our courts.., A man commits murder,,. At that moment he has all the high rights jof a citi- zeo, the right to the ballot, ' the right to be elected to office, the right lo the marriage relation, the right to the government of his children, the right to walk a freemavi jarowad the streets;- bat bf the Act of aittrier, hj that orims he forfeits this right, t?ihis' liberty, to his wife, to his children, and even to life itself. Mark me 1 He gets rid of none of his" ODitganons la society loy nis own rime:i' f Applause. 1A go with these States. While they uld,not make,,anerhair white or black, far as their diebcyranc from ihe Union "was 'concerned,' yat .they, by their -treason and their crimes) oiild forfeit all their rights in the Union, ...Jtot' lei's I traitors beoause., thfy,, were, joiiize1ns-;' pot less citiBCUB ueuaus? invy imo uaiiuio Applause Now then, what" is State ? for it is said' that V 4Jtt can never diov Suppose;' for momewt, ,, tht Rail,, th people t in a ( 8t,atet die, what becomes of ,the Jl.tate then? Laughter.. Srippdce - Jail me people move out or a -otie, (I noW ipak of 'the polilioal urganraa-tion at a part of this Government) What, becomes ot, tee at ate then f t)uppose one step farther, that all the people of a State snbstanriiiily, with a Tew jtioriortS exeep lions, whom we need not now stop to con- sider--eppose they U,repudiaio the.ir ob ligations to this Government and all bound themselves together and ' swore allegiance lo another Go-vernnienti,ritud all? united -in arms to drive outi the utluinuef of this. Goininen-rwlMt. &en- sbeoewies ' of-;tbe Stij'e.? . W.liy.jth.8tmte is destroyed, because the Stale is but the or'fean"of civil go'vern- men. "I ;do not'Htibw, tayfriends,; that It will ntakv the -argument, any istrsagsr T','t At the ai :v : rr, aui oi -rut. : I quote,.Jtn authority to. you, especially such an. guthoi-ity, but Andrew Johnson, in bis proclamation appointing provisional Governors, says that he appoints provisional Gov rnors nooao 611 -otvu goyernment (Sd--BjirojyM 4a, the. revolted States., f'WUh ell t vil government destroyed " using his very tanguaga, -"wnerewas the Btatef ' 'jyhe're- fore u the idea that a State can hevr die, that a State must always exist, and hat a SlleJby ,iLs people can fight , the Union fur tour years aua then come buck or its own lalitiWAnd undertake to govern the fllnjon is ,a,j9ophism. and a delusion unworthy ot in. intelligent' people., Applause. j Now, fhian, u.is.sal, farther, that a btate cannot di0 and panno)t,loee iifi rights, becauaia that ltjuos n.figintQeeceuo.. jusi us ioo ajiw a ui tie tartner. .1 sua a man jiere tu. ioe - i" : if 't. i - 1.1 - J 1:- li . rUSwafK. weuexiug in uis uiuuu, (iio iari eutr&nd he. bloody razor, iu his handjshow-r jDgjasa. pf ,8uioido,'.,".Why,',',',I say ,"(he oan i,-aeoa, ;, . ysso, sy ypili . ne cannpt be dead, he had no right to, put big ttirnaU" it is a nutation of right, not a 'quosfioa jjl faot... To, that,I answer, this is a quostion of nfRafMftl jrlM nJderstn4 to be Ui tcujiringiplaa of, the gr'ea): Republican pull'ou this question, that iu tliia great oontt-at uat :one xiiTlit of the Gov'rhment Am Ujise. States or , over, .t'e ..ottliiei s was )st,4iut eyer'y rjght of every trai'tor on, its so U. forfaited and gone fprevc Applause. itJi w have settled then.io o,ur satiafiquoii, upon U) a principles of . luexpraoie logif ua truth, what is the condition, of these Peo ple, we have settled definitely what shall be the ' rights of : Congress or the rest Pf the nation-.":Tlteil? tights' are1 -all potferfuL Theft -duty isi another . question, i Nfiw, iu D-goyeriittitntal notions against.conimuiiU .ties. t hasjalways been found neccssajry for fWlibvernment to treat obmmnnttita s, if, they had erred or bon miBled,Ho be jin the moss forgivea." hat all . go vorumonts have always treated as samples . those: that misled their nnmmiiTiUfeR Jand tftat ia Irir ''duty, it ' would1' seem to rie, ; in tho-present crisis, Applause to ex- tand i Ap ; the . South, -:to - -the - Southern men who as communities have been misled, our cordial welcome back when thew will Oitne bsek in the sriirit of truth, Of justice, of right, bf kindness and of loyalty in; which wq otter t receive them. . liuu tor tqe men that misledjthem, the great representative men, let them be so dealt with that no man hereafter shall ever leave his seat 'jn the Congress of the United States, or desert the glorious flag for the purpose of taking com mand in' the armies of our enemies. Applause 1 As 1 have said, governments must deal with communities if they have erred. as soo ir as the communities nave , shown a desire to be received i. back, in an humble,, (piarkthe word,) in an humble thafikfal-n'tts for the olemency meted out tat them. beoause it is for men who have' erred to be humble when they: acknowledge their mistake. As for, .the real, I would answer here the. question put,by the President, 'Would you bang eight millions? No, no, Mr. Prosidenl; God forbid! but you begin and hung- one, and we will tell you when to stop! tl.remend.ous applause . Now,, Mr.f JJavis is, perhapsby no means the worst man in the "Southern Confederacy," but h chose to hae lh9 place' of a representative man Mhe "played for-an empire, and stakjed, his iJ'u.on the result, and,.)et him. pay the for- leir, applause, as an example tor all .time that no man shall plot treason - in -the halls Of ' the "Congress of the United States: ApphtnBe What shall wje say, (allow soldiers, of another man who, educated in. tie. mtjiiry, academy, of tho United Stales, to b a equal to which we Jiad to serve four years in the field, mid blood and doatb; privation and imprisonment, brought up at tbt feet of Gamaliel, Ihe chesein, petted chief of staff iQ the Lieutenant General of the United States, on the 19th of (April, 1801, when our neighbors and comrades were being Boot down- iu Baltimore, resign ed his commission and . went back I to his uaiiviwtatf? JFr.what purpose? ior the purpose ot,. on the morning of the i2'21 of April followrag, reoeiving a commission as eomniauder o all the rebel foroes ih Virginia.,, Is Uierd any mau here so stupid as net to know thatColpnel Leo, of the United States cavalry, whcn be resigned his.conn mission on the' 19th of April, believed and knW-that he was to be appointed fa the 'i'iA, Commander-in-Chief of, ithei rebel army of Virginia? lie, did know it.j Now then, fellow soldiers, what shall bS 'done with the soldier who' deserts his flag, and takOS' with him the secrets of hiscommaud-r, i(cies of ."bang him,, shooting, lis too good for him,") who deserts for the purpose of taking command, or bribed by a higher command in tho armies of the eneiiies of 'Iris country? - Wy, vre .-all-know tlat by every, law, human and, I hope without ir-rcyerence, I may, say, diviue, any soldier who deserts bis nag for the purpose' of aking command it the army of Ihe enemy, shad snrely suffer death. Applause. ' But, say 'you. General Lee but followed fhe,'eeces8iotf of his 'Stale.' Alas ! .'my friends -history shows that there wns not left to him that poor excuse for rebellion! Fori on- the l"tb of April, his State ipassed the ordinance o , secession, but they; put in that ordinance a clause that it snouid be told and of none effect until it was ratified by the -people at a vote to be taken ion the 23d. of -the following May more than a month afterwards . So that General Lee left the army of the United states, aqd went into Virginia, and" was at the headjof the rebel fauces in Virginia beforet hi State seceded aarried her out at, iho pciut.pf UB pay unci, .iiiiw, geuiiemeu, we a(i an Arbold, aud he escaped punishnienf; but he did not remain here:' We have haB, as; it seems to me, sn equally gmlty traitpr, and the question, to. be decided,. in this qountry. is, whether his surrender as a prisoner of war' when he was cant urea.' Bhall avail him sgainsl th( 'desertion of his 'flag to lake sertvioe in the rmy rf the enemies, of hie pouttlryy vttties of "No! ncl" , t I. therefore, again siv that 1 would make example of this man, so that no jsoldier hereafter should evter find it convenient to desert the. flag of his country.. 'Good!-' ChW.T'AM'-T0T!i4B-''8t, the most hu initiating-speolaoleihat took placet at the olose of this war was tha, here were thesfO rebels threatening that if we did 'not do 'pre1y much as they wished, they would go to Mexioo, or Brazil, or aoum America, or somewhere they would go aud leave us WhAt ought we to have said to them? "Go! 'Stand not on the order of your going, but go at once. More ibau that:, lucre is a free ticket on board a United Stales tran-s porit toH take you wherever you life, aud the farthot tne' belter; but see to it that you never come' babk." ' And is there one ean bore to doubt that; if that course bad been, taken, there would ba to-day: peace, qui?t and amity with the South? Nobody doubts it. A golden opportunity was lcBt, but not lost forever. We have, offered to the Slates in rebellion that if they will ao cept the Constitutional Amendment they shall return to their share in Ihe Govern ment. But, fellow-soldiers, I want to add another condition to that. "Good, good." There may be many that the. country may need to add; but It as a soldier, desir,e to i , i : . : ,i 1. .. it ... 1 ft (Id one uuuuiuvu, hjiu you bhuii juuu uiq whether I wish to be very harsh.' : In the States Cemetery of Texas did lay reposing ihe bones of. our comrades who fell viatims to (he oliniate-and to the war in that State, They -were-t Sleeping : sido iby: side with the Confederate , dead. There,,, all animosity should have beeu forgotten. But the State Legisla'ureof Texas have passed a resolu tion that our comrades' -bones must be re moved to-'some other place, lest they con taminate the Confederate dead. J Hisses Again, at liolleywood sleep our comrades who died at Bella. Isle and, Libby; and when, on a time of festival, all Virginia turned out to deck the graves of the Con federate dead, a few Northern ladies whom they ' term: Northern school-marms, and few, women of darker hue, but. of true patriotism, went to deck the graves of our 0 mraaes wun men- iuyi lo&eas oi respect. these flowers ana tnese wreathes were IpfnUoWn and trampled in The dust , Again ihe 1 United States took money from the irotwiry , of, the North, sustained by our taxation, and bought a piece of land near Malvern HilTand tho brave and glorious dea-J who repose iti their last reining place on dbat bMl field!. t where we may say, wWiuut . doing,, wrong to anybody, if .tW victory baa ' been followed np, 'the 'war would have' been ended' Ihe United States, I ' say, bought a cemetery to: and gathered, the fragments of our dead he ''-' lo Si:. -I1.il rbos,' and' buried them- there-with due re, speot and Christian kindness, and ovej- their remains they raised this ur flag pointing to the' American"-standard 1, as the most fit- I'dut monument to a soldier of - the Union. Cheer. And yet the reconstructed rebels of -Virginia tore down that flag and tram-pied it in': the dustr Cries of "shame." There was a time in this war when a nan who tore down the -American flag met his- -deserts-tgreat sheering for "the only'man .ihat dared , to. bang a.ritor" and that' time will,,come .again,, Now, thaconditien I would impose, and vou.sfiatj judgejfcheth: er or not it ha a hard oue--is uus;. hat we s nan t nave tuose those. States, brought baok into the -. U man . until our until our dead 'corn'radii- chn 'l SleoD in neace and honor wiltin their bOr- dersVohcorsl:.ad if any man wants recon struction before that .happens,! ant net with MUI. LUC ,UJie,,' uuuu ..UJtWftC 1 r I a uim"' o the Com,mite baye.,aid .in. tlir resolu-.:..i . , ' : i ' it. i UOLUi 14111 lb .WttB ,UUlUj:tUllUM3 UIt(- VU1 F v poa'itiona.jjy (Congress vrej not.ieoeiVed in the some fraternal, pirit with whloh they were, offered,, and ,unlil.that time ooipes, be it sooner or latierj-TT-untu. every, man-can walk .in- peaae carrying the flag Of the United .States,.if, hepleasfs-jjith; evo tion to the Union on his lips, and bpt-jpa molested, In every Toyolled Stale, far one, I di' not -wont ntonsMiiUMt State in the Union makinit isiwaforme. fGfeatohgeW mm I i u.-.., nun tdor limn nnmnn I na ter; but never until the two oome ion ether. Cheers, , My friendeyVBaTtat we have., unkind .feelings , towards, thoep men, that; we arb governed, ,y..,maliqe,,',fWhy 1 was alvPhikde)pnia, and n6,tj tbe truej Union men of.tfie South. tUere; and Uia 'malipe hat we showed.,them'".w.ft81,tn take ISjitn to qnr hearts, to aur arms, and wilh very good feel ing to embrace then), as the true brothers of theNoBtlu : TJiat was '.t,jwj,w mat-ike Smi,Lhern .ioyaiBta who. Bad ev?r slood by ka.. For. one. 1 can. point back' when we had achieved the. greatest, victory, we -ever diot achieve-rrwhea we eleoted Preaident) Jen- son laughter, as the General .corrected himself - President Lincoln.' (I beg tar don of the Conyention.for the mishap. t nVhen we bad elected President inooln, wlitn' nis pernjujsion'aud with his knpwldge l stated in New. York, at a public meeting, that the only thing ,w.e' asked them to dd was to lay. dowa (heir arma and oome, oaok and resume thail nioA.a anil if ihav witnlit Anl tf would receive ,tiem. Butr they chose -to fight months and months after as long:s they could and then we asked them (o come, back, and w,bat is, the answer?. The answer at New Orleans in the murder, of I Dos tie and Horipu; this answer, is at Mem hi ln the .riots there; liar answer is heard t lloyer the country, for but yesterday,' all aost a Union officer fox doing his duty wt s kidnapped when about his lawful, business, and taken to . be tried .for obeyibg the order ,,. of. hia . comminder , by .a! rebel jury. .. Now... Kentiemen, ,1, say until m the same fraternal feelings with which we I, u I, oalra.1 lliam a MnmA Kab n w. A 'ATiilnj H not thjr.righis but what the clemency and puignanimiijr of..tle1 North, shall. ..givis them until tMyjeqeiTa Northern' nxn KorlA-? ern eqldiers, ,nto iieiiammunitieb with equal, rights, and equal privileges! nay more, until, every man. black or white, .who has ever worn the blue, b as, good, 4s "J1-body else . in, (he .South UD.til,lrtliat time comes,, ! say, tdo not'de8irej 'to.,'see( ihem yaca. , .ureat ooeenng.j , now is iaib question,. .then, to, be settled? ,JL hava some knowledge, of, the South, and. of Southern muj, (.lave already said to you' that had the President and. Congress agreed of what terms they would offer, at the moment after the surrender ' of Johnston's armyj those term would" have bo acoeded lo. But by the encouragement of the PresidenUby his most singula'r- and tfbt to be extilained oarsei and by the action-oof those at the North who have encouraged them, the South have come into a very different fiamt-io mind. But fellow Soldiers, let thdWsesi that the President does not rule this coun try without bheid of Congress. . .Applause ' Ihat s it. I -Let them understand that yeu take no step backward, applause, and tnat as sure as litthtl . follows, the darkness of the night, so sure we propoaei to (main tain the ioyeroment of this country, for which we hava foughl; and they , will ac- oept any terms we will offer, and- wje will offer uoue bat what are . just n4js9jgaasi. mous. I Uheors loud and Ions continued.! JKSN Y MN'8 XOSS jF.,Vll)E. " All our readers wfllTegret to learn that the' greal singer' who exoiled stich jentbus siasni in. this cOiuntry nearly, twenty years gn, anu wno was lovenr.ayaiosi., as mncn for her generosity of heftrtf ' for her mar- elous voice, no ' longer retains her power. letter in the uourier.des ttats Unjis tells the sad story : u. ..-i-'-.-?.:r -i-. i j How shall we describe the 'impression we received on hearing1 Jenny1 Lindj at St. James's Hall last week in M. Arthu Sullivan's coriceift.'' " " r ' l ' ' We had not seen Jenny Lind "for more than1 eighteen years. At that time she was the itlot- of 'the public: we were taen at Vienna, Day and night, thousand of people were colleoted around la place Qrabonii where she wassiopping. The illustrious oadtatrice w&s-tben in. the zanih of her fomq. ' The police themselves- could not disperse the crowd, for they were bIbo under the magj- oiaii. s spellr. Use of our friends compared th'is power of fascination to that of Orpheus, W1IU VUUIU DUUUUO C1QU IfflUUlVUO UOttBUI. At lh,Bt.Jime we are still speaking of twenty years.', ago Jenny Lind- (visited America with.. Benediot and BarnUm. What a reception! , Never did a qeen on her! first tentry into her kingdom teqeive sucji a webojue. This oyatitjji, was spon taneous. . i B irnum,' Ihe king of 'JPaf,' would hot sell be tickets for Miss Lind's oonCerti at' the music stcroe; bo out . them, uo- at auction. and, thanks to tbs means, realized fabulous sums. .- People engaged seats several weekB .3 l'a' L-t. ti..j.l. .IVU ' j?-L . l. .11 u auvauo?; uiejr uuugub moui lur-.utBir weight in gouV ' -- : i-'..-.fi v -JSoarusto that we: know ever mfct with ach brilliant success; ,. we were, young at hat time, and on hearing the "Swedish Nightingale," we thought 'We hadi near known iill that moment-what tne human voioe was. v as it a woman wno waasmg- ing? Tha augl.-s in heaven could nV have softer or more delicious notes. What vigorous, ravishing 'fullness! if :- we may be allowed to connect those two adjleotives, Wbat-au angeUo spressionl That word aloue-r! auger sums, up Jenny Lind. "She an angel," said every body, and; no one could say it enough. ' 1 ' Her voice was virginity. ; no have sai ihat-itiift first time- we heard Jenny Lind was af. Vienna; she wg then in the. fullness of her power. Ten years after we law her gain, si ill as beautifuf; grand, sublime as ever. ' ' ' " ! - 1 , Lust week Jenny , Lind was to make her appearance m Lonuon, iu M. buIUvan 8 concert. We in agined a talent so imperial could never he diminished.-. What a cruel: deoep uonl It was no longer Jenny. Lind-i-it was Madame LinGoldBchmidt. We believed, we should seethe goddess of song,' but, alael we found ourselves at the play of a great actress with voice worn out, dead I Nothing, uothinirl: Charles Dickens, , in bis "Uld fJuripsity Shop," describes an old woman Who for forty years, wears mourning TorKer layer. When he died they were .both 'young and beautiful. : After hia death tne inoensoiaple woman went every . day to weep oter ;hts tomb Yi-ars rendered her old and decrepit but in the mind of the poor deluded 'soul her beloved is always young. What would she. say if he should issue from hie tomb. old and ugly? ,,(, ., , -,i She would receive pretty muou the same-tmpregsion thitt was -produced hpon us by the shadow of Jenny Lind. - la it her shadow, -even? .. , ., i,,; .- i .,; ' ,, ; Wo went agoiUj an . enthusiast, to,, hear, the "Swedish Nitingale'.'' d we found only Alas! every thing passes, away in. (his poor-World. , ' n - x :: !--J j : -, : iv . i : (. ..Perhaps she remembers a little circuni-siance pretty well known in her ,dy, in Germany. " -- . . . . 'Miss Lind w'As'dit the time' in Vienna; she was -then the full blase of her glory Hundreds pf admirers, with shouts n.; triumph,' led ' her to her theater, ...ahd.bf ck, and t-i'oivined under her Windows all night, Plaoes'were Hnattmlnabl except to Jjuraes, .well filled. : MJne day an old;woman preeen ; l.-na t-j''jiiiV .A ,f .-Mi'st ted herself at '''Jenny Lind's hotel! and re efnested permission to speak to her. Tho illustrious cantatrioe was at that moment with Meyerbeer. The old woman was introduced, and asked in a trembling voice fer,a tioket to the evening's entertainment MiSs Lind immediately slipped two into hor haad.''Vi i ;n i -c' : ; 7 ,j'WademoiBelle," said . the. old woman, 'l am. jjOjOr miserable, and unknown, now but formerly I bore a name as illustrious as yVurs. ' I wai, like you, a queen of song I have' had, like yeu, ray admirers, but ago has destroyed my voioe and my beauty neglect, oblivion has oome, and that death Lot artists a thousand times more terrible than death itself!" Jenny Lind and Myerbeer immediately demanded, her, name. . ,,That name,, I have myself forgotten, as familiar as it was at Vienna at the time this Incident transpired there; I rtimembet' the fact, howevel-, that this woman created: in Germany the role of Panama, in tha ."Enchanted fjlute.",. ; y I cite this aneodote beoause it returned immediately to my memory when' 1 heard Jeriny Ltnd at St. James' Hall. Why have not great artists, the courage to quit the scene the . moment,. 4heir prestig1 yanishes, that the publo may not he allowed (o witness the sorrowful Bpeotacle of a decayed "talent?'1 It is'painfal 'to break the statue upon il pedestal. ):l : ; i, -.. f Personal and Miscellaneous. 1 A oortespoadent at Panama writes that the natives there are among the most squalid,; most happy, and, most immoral on tie faoe of the glohe. f j I A German gardener out west,. on hip death bed'.'told his wife Where he had buried ten thousand dollars. Mourning and joy were a liUU miwl,if-!,--: - . ,.- I : Cbarletton, 8. C, has bett very, hoalthy during , the summer, the average weekly mortality not exceeding 33 deaths. :,..,.. . . The planet Venus shows in the west with peouliar. splendor now-a-days for an hour oriwoarter sunset. ' j i .i;; While unseen by Teach other;- at a Richmond auction room, husband and wife ran up an artiole from five to thirteen dollars. Tjhe wife won. 1 ; , ' It is' said that there is searoely a member of the French Court who does not owe more than he can by any Baorifioe possibly pay. Dissipation and extravagance. , ,.'. - o-A class of young girls being examined in poiitioal economy were asked, " How is Congress divided ?" AVith an air oif confidence, a sweet sixteen replied : " Civilized, half-civiliied and savage." ' ! :J . Eleven 'hundred sheep were seized at St. Johnsbury, Vi, last week, by the. -internal revenue officers. Their owners couldn't remember how many they had, and returned the 'number as seven hundred, but the officials knew better, and ienoe the trouble. ' Mr. John R. Thompson, known in America as the editor of the Literary Messenger, is saift to pe the " tleros von tsoroke of. Blackwood's Magazine, whose adventures -While in the Confederate service are soon ;to be published in book form. - ' The Carew Paper Company of South Had-ley Fall?, Mass , has just declared a yearly dividend1 of one hundred per oeat, besides reserving a fund suflioient to build an addition to. their mill. Last year the dividend was 120 per cent.' i .. The London ra devotes considerable of its space each week to a discussion Of Blind Tom's musical talent. It pronounces his feat of playing three .different tunes at the Bme time, .','a task biyoni civilization, sane people generally, and the entire white family,' , , ... ... A gipsy . woman premised -to show two young ladij-s their husbands' faces in a pail of water. 7 lneyiootea ana exclaimed, "we only see our own faces.", "Well," replied the gipsy, "those faoea will be, your husband's when you are married." Mr. Everett and Judge Story were at a public -dinner ., The ordinary, toats ''Were1 given, when Judge Story arose -and said, "Fame follows fortune where ever it (Ey. ereltej'goes " Everett replied," "Here's to the legal profession. It has nevergol above the first story ' (Story.) .-, , John Decker, of Westkii), Greene county, N. Y was Btandins on the roadside firina aeyolver, a day or two since, when Qeorge Angel came along in a carriage with two ladies. Decker supposed he had exhausted the cartridges, pointed the pistol playfully at Angel, and snapped the pistol three times, when it-Went on, the ball striking Angel in the back, just below the left' shoulder blade, and lodging, it is Bupposed, near the bowels. Angel Js expeoled to die. r . t . An amusing error appears in the columns of a leading paper in Paris. The following paragraphs, intended to have been printed separately, were by some' blunder; so ars ranged-that they read conseoutively : Dr. has been appointed head physician to the Hospital de la Cuarte. Orders have been issued Jjy ihe authorities' for ihe iui mediate extension ,oi the cemetery of; Mount Parnassee; tha, works, ore being exoouted witn ine utmost aispaicn." I Polite Gentleman-Good morning,', sir. How do you feel yourself to day ? - Deaf Gentleman Very stormy and dis agreeable. ,. !. rt r; , . , ! Polite Gentleman Slightly astonished, but determined to recover lost grojund)rii- Indeed!, How is your good wife, sir f Dear uentleman very windy ana blus tering indeed, i !,1f '" fnMonlrtfal, Tuesday , a little girl fell ower tbta wire railing that surrounds one of the basins in yiger. square, into water eight feet deen. B.h.e was saved, like Rome, by some geese..., A numqajof these warblers, that were kept there, commenced gabbling about Ihe acoident.'and attracted the gardener's attention to the spot.: He -arrived just in lime lo lescue the child. ; A story is told of a Western candidate that oame upon "a poor white man, who had a vote to i give, if he did . do his own milking - The eondidate, Jones, asked him if ho should hold the cow, wbioh seemed to be nnase, and the old man consenting very .readily, he took her by the horns and held fast till the operation was done. "Have you had Robinson (his rival) round here lately' be asked. "Uh, yes, he s i behind the barn, holding the oalf !" - A naturalist says': "Last summer, while in my park, I observed a green woodpecker light on th ground some htteen paoes before me, look around to see if he was ob served, then lie down and simulate death by Blretohing hlmeelf motionless and hang ing his tongue out as far as possible. He occasionally pulled in his tongue. He had selected a place near an ant hill. The ants, thinking him dead, would oover his tongue to devour mm; wnen it was biacs wits ans, he would swallow them, and repeat the trick until his maw could hold no more. That wo.dpecker was not as green as he might have been. -: The last scene of .the "Black Crook" at Niblo's Garden, New York, requires the services of seventy-one night men to move and arrange the scenes, work the traps, etc; eight day men to dear the stage; one head property man and fire assistants; two pyrotechnists; nine gas men; six calcium-light men; wardrobe master and five assistants; eostnmer; two armorers; thirty-five children; corps de ballet of thirty American and twenty-three English girls; three premiere and nine solo dancers; a ballet master and six scenio artists. In all, a total of two hundred and eighteen persons,, besides the dramatic people who are not here enumerated. COLLARS. C3 .0;-.JL. JL.Fl (' Possess advantnges KNOWN TO NO OTHER MAKE, O-.'nUimug'. the Strength and Flnlahsjf the finest Line Collars, aud being made mr" perlect and tasT'tttiug. -, -'. ' ,' -i- .. ,llaeiei-ywhsra,.( , (... ootllw- GIFT CONCERTS $ioi;oo4 Op ! Special Card! -.- - :;. I - . 1 . .. . ... i. OFBNING FAIR COMMRNCSIK September, 24th lilt,, ' .m:.k - i ' ' ' Aid Is now la JuU blast, at thtf commodlon rtow, ,:-- . '-' : ' :I : '.. .. J ,. i .. "''J' ,,, . ,.JVo. 103 West I'enrtU Street, Where the PUKMimrS ARE ON EXHIBITION. ThU Fair promlwa to be one of the most shocam- ful evorheld Is it Wwt, ndfthrU aodoobt that H wiij.do very naiwiBctory, to all IB. patrunf . xne manager ana vireetory, nave arcldeq to-eoa t utiie air i wo wneas, ana, at iu close, ' t It' : 1 '.-'' I -I I ! FIFTY" T30USAN0 PREMIUMS ! : - :- WOKIH 101 tOO, , j ' ''f' -:.:' t: :- n j Will be 'diftrltiBtod among' the t(iketholJr. Among the premiums maj.be meotoaed oil of . , , . ' : - . - -1- - f: - T ; ' ' .,.- $10,000 In. Oreenjbacks! '- r-.:- : .: .'i t. Pi (--;:'!, : . ! I : Tbreo''eirble Olty Bnldeaces. worth tS.KIOi, nair of Matched (larilage Hore. worth Sl,fiO0; let of f arior rnrnitnre, worth si.wu; urano riano, worth SL009; Horn, Buggy and Harneu, worth 11.000; magnificent net of Bridal Varnftare, worth S750; inia XTI Pl.oo, Worth 870O; heavy Qold Magic Uase Watch and Chain, worth (700; large Cloater Diamond Ring, worth tSsO; Saddle Hone with Saddle and Bridle, worth (500; Torklih Tapestry C-.rpet, worth (450; splendid Carved Bldebord, worth (260; together with i: - . - ? 49,885 ADDITI03TAK, PKEMIPMS, Cprth from Two Hnndrtd OItacrfiwDwaTd. eon-fltsting of Ladles' and Genu' Gold Wateb.es and Ohaios, donble sat of Stlvrplated Oarriage Uar. am '. Plated Tea Seta. 811k Drew Pattern!, Silver and Plated War.v fine Buggy fiarneaa,, Opera-glaatM, ewiog-maohioea, flue Furniture, eilver Watchea,. Ladies' and Qonta' Baddies, M osic -Boxea, Wrltiog Desks. Work Bcxes. Qreeobacks. Diamond BIuks and Breast-pins, Solid Gold Jewelry', Slr?f Spoaus, una uovkB aud Albcmba, aai a great variety ox useful aud oruamental articles, fully desibed.iB Catalogues. ' 1 ' - ' A Catalogue win oe sent to any address on receipt of stamp for return postage. - - I Th Premiums are on exhibition at the Fair. TloUetsi) SO Oont I - And at. the Ibllowfog CLUB . R ATE S:. ! as Tickets loone lcIress,......Sia OO 50 " ' - 33 OO 100 " 45 OO aoo- ' . - ! s7 so All mifi by mall must ioclse.stamDS to pay re turn postage. .. . . j rjlnbe and liidl bldualti who nnrch&a lOOir mnra tickets may deposit funds for the same in bank. snh. jeot to our 6rdervArrBa tbv distribution shall have Deen made, according to adfertised terms. The certificate T any bank itt good ataudlng,. setting torth the e nlract on whloh tee dapoalt Is received, will be taken Iti payment for tickets till the 8th of October, provided the cartiflcate is not-lor a lea amount than (45. - : ISS Ail the Premiums will be readv for delrverv as' soon sfc the omctal Hward t : anuouneed. Tbe award will be printed, la full, and a oo;.j sent to every tioket-hol-Jer. ) ' l"w omers ihat may b received after tl ikets are all sold, or too Utje.to fill ,ft-omaBy cause, th-stone win us iviunuru, lur lut) tiiwnijr ui hh luliy.f' merit, refereace. Is Bade. to most of the prominent bu-inest men of Cincinnati. , - av Address all orders to - - :. :-- . J. St, HAWI.GT fc CO., MiHAOtBS AND 0ENBB1L AoSSTS, No. 14 visa Slreef, octl 2tM&W OifrciINNAT-I, OHIO. PIANOS. LIGHTE, LlQJtTE, And Musics . . i 3 iitjb xi a. tm o s. Thb Best in Uss.. ' ' ' ISl'EY'S OROAN WITH TREMOI.O. ' ' ' I SO LB AGKSTS FOU OB 10 AND INDIANA. Agents wanted in every comity. 1 OfcH and t xamine for jour.elves. " . ... HABBIfi A 00. v Norlu nivb street, Colam1a,Ohl Wrh. ZInabe & Oo.'s "i FIBST PBEUinU GOLD MBDAL fitrniid, Square and Upright rpHESE INaTKOSKNTR HAVISfJ BSSN Bl-L PrjRB the- pobtte tor the past thirty years. nave, upon tneir exceiieuoe alone, attained an aa. pHrchate-1 pre eminence that pronouaces thn an. equalled. - i., ..... Their TONE combines m-eat cower. richoeM. eweetnesa, aud flue singing qnwlity, as welt at great purity ot intonation ana nartuoBlousaess tnrougn out the entire scale. -' i ' Their I OUOH In pliant and elastic, and Is entirely iree li-om tue stiBness found In so many pianos, which caftess tha'oer'nrmer to so easllv tire. In W0SKS14NSaiP they cannot ba exoeUed. Their aililn is constructed with a oare and atten tion to tterypart taenia that eharaoterixes th nuest nuwuanlBm. None but toe best seasoned material is asrd iu their niannfactnre. aud they will accept the hard usage of toe concert room with that ot the parlor upon an equality, nnalected in hir melody; in fact, tby are consttucted "KOT FOB a veau, but Foasvca." Ail our Square Pianos have our new improved G:and Scale and the patent A grafie Treble. , . Wareroomi No. II A 13 aai SUttaBt., Ooluxxt'bu.siy O. : - aa41y. . JOHN SEL"' ZSB A 00. Ag'ts. : INSURANCE. il Insnraica Se Iavestiiient Co. COLITMBUS, OHIO. Office, ::::::: No. 8 Opera BalMing. (!nvUl Stock, $150,000. W A. HAN LEY, President. CIEO. I. t'RANE, Heo'y. , , sep!8 tf THE GREAT WESTERN American Horse Insurance AND DETECTIVE CO. rrtHt OLDKST COMPANY OF THB KIND IN X the Uulted States. Insures Horses, Mule and 0ttle against Aocident. Death and Tbet. Agentn wanted. J. T. PAINS, Aatuary, Office. Buckeye Block, ui16 ly Over Repress Office SVflEOICAL j C. C. MUnr, 5a. ., Keif eric Pfcysician & Snrgeon HAVINO LOCATKD IN COLUMBUS, BBBPNOT-FULLT tenders his professional servloes to the o!trMns thereol aud vicinity. All dlrwras trmted rrlthout mercury. ' Otllce, on Courdi At., between State A Broadway ,,.t.i. amr neoo nn lyr Dir. Stevens & Co. I1AB PKVOTKD F1VTC1CN TRABS IN OIM 1 AOINNATI tothr imtment of I'frrate Dlne.sf t, Tui-y wntsr tn'en a cnt. . without tu. nseof mercury --r I1 Torms oi Priv its Diseaskb, especially those ol --oiht eianilng.. Uos of sexual power restored in a pw weeks victim of self-abuse 'and excesslT. Yf-.f.- y, suerlos; from Spermatorrhea, speedilycur-.4.- -1' r ons at a diotauce treated bv addrenlug Pi SMfVKNS A Oj 2H)WiutB.,betunrthan4 eiitn, vincinnan. suraoiy DRY lCObbs T: NEW,EAttG-0Oj)S, O. EBERLY & C0.J Sti-eef, Wo. 804 T Sontk ' High i . ,r V. ,NBW .ASO KvSLL : lA BK BB0K1VISO il adjected stock of I-j . j -. -u . I , " J ' '! ';- r I' - n . . -r I . 'i .-t t .1 e-T.. rt At Extremely Iw Prljpca.: MERINOS, ". .' .. ,",' .vpoi-'fLAba, KMPKEa CLOTliS,,. AJ.PACAS. . i COBURQS,. .. . , -DEUINES, ftp, &c. AAOHWfiS, .oiBAliML9RAX SKI Rim, r if. -(-.):. - ...:,"... . . i Hoop Skirls in Great Variety, - . GINGHAMS, ,i ,, ..FLANNELP, 't-f-..ll.. i..-. i. ... I - CLOTHS .; . .. ,; .CASSlMEfiES, ;. DOESKINS, ; BAXIMBtS, , TWEEDS,.. . , , , JEANS, WOOLEN . YARNS, - . . , . ! ' ', j T. ,.;,:, MOMErMADE fLANELS BeSprearf8,'! Blankets J Coveriei in .1 Great Tsrpety ! A large stock of Mens' and Boys' Hats and Caps, lower that cm be btughtlu the city. , ! v j ,. We hava slmaddad to cur stack a. rice JelAetim, Of Tapestry, 8ply, Ir grain, gialr and Hemp Car- irato, vbb wiu- si oajerevi as xtreiMiy-iw prloea .. . C. xJBlBIr A CO., '" - fFcSMM oor.aigk and Friend sts., M"?8 .j . PolnmbusjOhlo. HARDWARE I J. M. STUART .An'C . 1 011 .. in n ,n.-i,: Hvawhotarara A Wbvtetolsaud Betail Dealers in -' ' ':! : : r. ,.it. j.;.,:.. j Tin,Oopper,'!i And Sheet-Iron Warel Also, Dealer la. LAWSON'Sj HOT AIR FDjRlJACES.B -! LotaeHi Superior 1 CnKltab : Ciwktiuc Superior i Cngltsb: , BaasTew, 1 : - 3 I n Grates. Whtte MarU,nd If arbleixed Slate and Iron Mantles. Ac., sc.: and Sole Aaenta for Pl r Stewart's Large Oven, Air-Tight . , . "COOKIftG STOVE, I V- :- ' Asl th Notsd- A, Ij X I Or A. 1 O " COAL i COOKING BTOViw i ' tarSeod . ' I DYEING. Fancy Dyeing and Scouring ESTABLISHMENT, -A No. 8 East Town street, c -t i - (Opporila franklin National ank,)! '" ' !' COLUMBUS, OHIO. - : i ' ' W floods Kecelved and Betarned by Hxnress.,. augteod lyt ' : - . I SCHOOLS. OHEQARAY INSTITUTE. ; -v.' no i ii'ii.. K . ! i (Freneb ltnd Engrlisb),'7 j F O B IT O tJ & L I D I E s . ' ' ' ) . ' BOAEDINO AMD DAY -PUPIL9, 1,S27 AND 1 S2 Spruce street, Philadelphia, Pa., will openonTtTURSOAT, SKPTBMBBB 20. Board and tuition, per niwt..MM..., I 9450 ao ao,, ao, tor two or more .-' suiters, (eaoh. .i . Hw.-'........-.;...4,...iM 400 French ia av.laniraaeV of tha famiW.1 and ia conotautly Bpokan.i.n the Iii4tltnte j' eoa asutKiummiLLi, :, Ml?m ll WII8 ., . , Principal. MEDICAL BOARD. . TAJAIt.DKPAKTMINT. fj : - ' BUBOBOIi-OKHf BAL'S OmCt, Wasbikotom, D. J., August 0, 1866. A N ABUT MEDICAL BOARD, TO ODNSIT IX. or Brevet DM Duel J. B. Brown, botbod. u. s, A , Sresldent;. Brevet . Lle.utenut-Oolpnel H. B. Wirta, Surgeon, U." S. A. i Brevet Lieutenant-Colo nel, Anthony Heger, U. 8. A and Brevet Maior WarreS Webster. Assistant Scrgoon. U. B. A.. Be- eorder, will meet in New Tork City on the 30. h of September, next, for the rxaminattonof, candidates tor aamission into tne Meawai Btan or ue u. a. Army. '' - .... ' Applicants must be over 21 years of age aad physically soonit - ' ' i Applications for an invitation to appeaVIefore the Board should ne aoareisea ro tne eurgspuea- eral, U; and must state the rail name, rest, dunce, and date and place of birth of the candidate. Testimonials1 as to character nd qualifications must be furnished. If the , applicant basjbeeaJa the Medical Service of th- Army darl-r ih? war. the faot should bette4('tcgether with, kit former rank; and time and place of service, and tenttmo. rialv-from th bfflcarawith whom he bai erve4 should also be forwarded. . . J Mo allowance Is made for the expenses of persons unre-going the examination, a it la aa.lniTBpaiisa-blepr requisite to appointment. ThTO are at present sixty vhcaaciM la tte MeA icalr StaflT,: forty Tslx o,' prbich are. original, bipg crpateu oy tue act or uongress, approves, juiv Bfiih. UHft. ... t .: JOH. K UAE1I1CS -J anglt eod toctl6 ' Surgeon -Qneral U 8 A. COSMETtC i 4 tt . ? "'' ' MADAME SlotVAfcl .' r. - :jl H t'.'ir. - - it' Xjetc5Lls'. Toilet., T WILL BEMOVB ALL SBUPX10N8 OF IHB Skin. Fncklej, Tetter, Tan or 'Chap from the lira, and lnusart s frathnsaaand a yontbtaLfraatJu ness which noother cosmetic or powder'wltl do.. It Is ao tnoispersaoie ftrtlow lor laorw w, ana e for sale bv all uruigitts. - ' B'lnTSBf saABino. ijloi NOB C0, Sianolsctuters, ihii wawut street. BubdsalA Bsos.. DruVglstev WholMalej Agents, cir. Alain A front sm.( Cuciuaati, O. . sepao lau -. .. . .. - . i- '- PERFUt-lERY. Penney's--Byjtian 'Lotus, t..', iw taT y J Biti - CANDKEKCJirikE-1 PGNKKT A t'., I am t'fUtomAvenne, BrookIyn,N. x. For sate tt mofoturw-B tirtees bf J . ,h,. , HABBJp eiGLBtt, ' Wholesale Kotiou Dealers,-1 ' -., ..i ft -r. -107 sad-.lieHsHt Tows street.-1 And by all Diugglsla in Uolnmbns, Ohio, and Fancy Goods D eslera. '' ,;1;:' aogaS3m - COmL COAL ! v. COAL I COAL ! iVufral Shaft Cl Mitel ... i "tTAvfNQ WtTHINTflN'TAST TwAB.erjS1 A 1 1 8hft and dielopod a flns vela af , Cm' of Sn?rlor (Qnalili, ' ' .-.,( wo- 1. , ... It... I '-" - ' We take pleasure in announcing to the putMlo ti i,i - Sr" now pr:rsei to supply ss articHe thst ef S OTB E ,8 0 R PA 8 8 E D i - Bylauy Bank to fh 'Stat..' 1 ;" :.. viiesir. to sen or paroaas lit. btock. bsl Awtat " iaoOBOBiWO LIAMs 00 , Petroleum Lans,or Oil Stocks.-J7B :riTT fJanpb.U Utatiwi, 0,0. B.B. ' majrlOdtf ASDKW WFUrOH, J -a-raiiiiia fi-i.Y . :i,.vv i "" ' : - -.: CLOTHNC. n .iilA'3 to y: Ready-Hade Clothing ! .ifirh ytkOZESALti AND RETAIL, Hff 'IW-HV- l!f !kl ,i III... ' is Xeiclii4ut l?&iloz CL0TH3. - -;i u-itr. 0A6iMERK3H- . - ....T,. -r. .-,... ;WeeD3' ?tT i-it ESXINOS. ASD Penis' FoVMhuigwftw. JOSEPH ClVltACmEHEIIKB, ... ... II'MI-III f .I'H f v., rjlAKES PLSASCBB IS INroBMINQ HIS OLD f-. - - , uu .uc ,VDnM puuilO, UCt SI BIS Utdt returned: rrooi ttaa. Buterafvillw with the larg Ht ami tuHtk aIai.H aiu.W nf . . . . . . nip iiuv uihaLrie lur ton kiwd, smufWHBg : ' :ai!. i-.ii'ini. VreuchT Ingflsli'aaf Sfttau8, Fa r and winter werxjoats, and Boita ot "Every liasorJptton, 'both Foreign ver offered in tUaru other market. Oall aaA aaa my goo4s before buying elsewhere, and ba eon- iuuru tua rnars ine sesx venctea atocK in tue mrkat,Bd.a, cheap as any other hou dare aelU To fhoae who have nnndnt with their mlmn. age--ta tefMIvm taaakfal, and can now aaaura theia41u( tt canseHJSia a-oods which will be satisfactory. -l-.Tl ' . The Uerchant Tailoring department is under tha charge Mr. J. B, FTrniai, from. Hew York, whose reputation Ibr vrellmadA garmaota needs ao comment. . A flneand fn1tasortmentof Children's Clothlnt: oonstaatlv on bod. apr21 6m DRY GOODS. UYJBJB & LAJWDEIX, Fonrttt Ar,ci 8ts., PbiIIpnlaPa. ABB JOvrEBIXO. ON T3 jjfcsf OfHfABM8 A full stock of FALL-DVY-GOOBH nnestockof . SHAWLS; Fin. stock, pf ILK; Fine stoek of DBESS GOODS; Fine s"ck of WOOLS SH; Flu. stoe wsLit.resilXiDe stock of FANOT OOODS.Ac, Ae .New and desirable Goods daily received' and sold at smalt advance', WwwLBSALK. September sum, moo. Sep' daw w r rt i,. :. iiii Tr - 9'IJ li 33 WholesalerjityZ Qpo&s iitir.'" ' unaif J fc IV E.t MlttEB & JOYCE BtO TO JiNNOUNOB TO TH TBAtB IN OITT siid country, tht they bava opened, ia their new building, 7 '"T Ccrntr AAivb and Losg streets, ."'IH r The Ltrgsst sMWti.at ot Dry Goods ' &' Notions Brer cff-Ted to ths trae Id this sctiBa, it. of which have been purchaed for CASH, ssdsnattrtlk. most fsvorablo drcumstanses of the markets. W. invite dealers to call and examine our f-xtbesiv. stock. and we p sdge oniwlvec ts supply Abwcn-st aa low prices aa they can purchan , in ,tha j cheapest markets in the country. UolvmaaaHtptambriHriSD,TR sep2Atf New Goods! ftew GoodsF J. D. USBOJ&N tt QO., HATE J0S1S BIOS1VC0 A LABOB STOCK o New Goods, oosprisiug ". a. n. i e: w s , ' . I ii-- ,it' Oil OloOkie And all -Bitr Hoiiee Furnishittg. Z A3111s.es. 91lSB,-iB, -- - .- -.-:. i- :'i-U Aad s'l.lnds pf .JjU, Fancy Dress Goods! i A 1,30 w.ui Cassimercs, flannels,'' Muslims. I', n: : ..-..rTii.L-ii'o A full llne-of noatlca.OUvea, Hosiery. Ac, Ac which will be sold very tew f.ir'c8H. seplS lm CROCEK3 McGolmiMile's j& Ms&pnald : ,-' i: l-j-.'-V 2jll..J .lit ' "' 1 '' " ' "'oprlotST'4"or ' ' ;-: Cilombas Powder Magazine I - ;.T!i.--Trf !.!. in? ' ."Aud'igenfs for Fhipp's &',Oa.'s Hams M AS covYrrTpB.s, ANi;coyE. .. JadI'66 dly OLtTMBUS, OHIO. COMM!6SIONHdU3ES EDWiED i. V1TGB. t C E -if Ef.-Fitoli '--" 'COIiOMBITB, OHItKf "' --''" ''. ''- BBAiBrj : --n. ! Flour, eraln;r $&lt,twtnt9 AMD PAODOCK QIKKKAIA.t' BestdnMiity or Hol and Cold Blast Pit; iron Buvrnys on iiut:ti - 8peoial Trsvnsfer 4 Shipping Agent " - ' or vssi hmm i O. A O, B., Oentral Ohiq and p. .q.jt O. B. B -in. jti s .L,mrauT0B or.,THs' Columbus, 'Ihllliootlia Portsmouth - '-i )-(Packet C'ouipnajr.- And Soioto .and '. ilockintj ' Valley Express rrelaAI-UastUt AdKBTsor HocKtNO Vallst Salt CoMPAitr H. FITOH A SON rlveThrnurhOontrMCBon Pro. duo sad Freightr from all points oa the Oanal to tne pastern -;, by kail, lake, or UAPAL. Warehovet, Eatl and Wett End'bf Scioto . 's Bridge, foot tf Broad St. . OFFICE, 87 WEST BROAD S'tlEET. JSBl'oSlyra ' AJID. . - ' :! , ,1;4,.sy Htl . pETROtErW JEXfHANEI - - - -t - .ji i . ,-i . .. I HAVF. PPENBd' A , 1. 7-slD .1 . , r K TB OL1 FJ K E x e n a. j g n in i ,,f IN THB SODTH-WBST OOBNI'U'F THBtV'cT Ode. building, where I shall be 'ple-sed t.. nr. "f gows, noon reesoaabW tmm., with altpersops.ho r i